Inocentes
Origin Brazil - São Paulo
GenresPunk rock, post-punk
Years active1981 - present
LabelsPunk Rock Discos
Cameratti
Eldorado
Paradoxx Music
Abril Music
RDS
Ataque Frontal
Monstro Discos
Warner Music
MembersClemente Nascimento
Ronaldo Passos
Nonô
Anselmo Monstro
Past membersAndré Parlato
Antônio Carlos Calegari
Antônio "Tonhão" Parlato
Ariel Uliana Jr.
César Romaro
Marcelino Gonzales
Mingau
Websiteinocentes.com.br

Inocentes is one of the oldest active punk rock bands in Brazil. The group was formed in 1981 by former members of pioneer local punk bands Restos de Nada and Condutores de Cadáver.

During their first incarnation in the first half of the 1980s, Inocentes played basic energetic and politically charged hardcore punk, exemplified by the Grito Suburbano compilation tracks and their 7" EP "Miséria e Fome".

The original band split up in 1984, but frontman Clemente Nascimento put a new line up together a few months later with former members of São Paulo Oi! band Neuróticos. The new line up dropped the hardcore influences and adopted a cleaner, more melodic sound mixing punk, post-punk and other influences. In July 2016, their 1986 album Pânico em SP was elected by Rolling Stone Brasil as the 6th best Brazilian punk rock album.[1]

Apart from some line up changes over the years, Inocentes are still active, always led by Nascimento, who has also been playing guitar for Brasilia post-punk veterans Plebe Rude since the mid-2000s.

Discography

YearTitleLabel
1982Grito SuburbanoPunk Rock Discos
1983O Começo do Fim do MundoSESC
1983Miséria e FomeInocentes Discos
1984Life is a JokeWeird System
1984Volks GritoVinnyl Boogie
1986Pânico em SPWarner
1987Adeus CarneWarner
1988Miséria e FomeDevil Discos
1989InocentesWarner
1992EstilhaçosCamerati
1994SubterrâneosEldorado
1996RuasParadoxx
1999Embalado a VácuoAbril Music
1999Garotos do SubúrbioRDS
2000O Barulho dos InocentesAbril Music
2002Vinte Anos ao VivoRDS
2004LabirintoAtaque Frontal
2013Sob ControleSubstantial Music

References

  1. Cavalcanti, Paulo (20 July 2016). "Os dez maiores discos do punk rock nacional". Rolling Stone Brasil (in Portuguese). Grupo Spring de Comunicação. Retrieved 23 August 2016.


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