In this
Portuguese name, the first or maternal
family name is de Souza and the second or paternal family name is Andrade. "Júnior" is a
generational suffix used for someone whose name is the same as their father, like "Jr." in English.
Ernesto de Souza Andrade Júnior (July 12, 1966), better known as Netinho, is a
Brazilian singer and composer known for his work as a solo artist and with Banda Beijo.[1]
Netinho initially played
Brazilian popular music and
Bossa Nova but later discovered
Carnival. In 1988, he jointed Banda Beijo as a vocalist and debuted on the local Carnival circuit.[4] Their first big hit came in 1988 with the single "Beijo na Boca."[4][3] Shortly after, they appeared on the eighth episode of the new
Rede Globo show Domingão do Faustão.[5] In 1990, they toured Italy in an
electric trio during the
FIFA World Cup; afterwards, Netinho set off on a mini solo tour around the country.[4] The band's third album in 1990, called Eu Quero Beijo, was released by
BMG; its release party, held on the roof of
Barra Shopping, reportedly drew 40,000 attendees.[dubious –
discuss] In 1991,
PolyGram[6] released their next album, Badameiro.[4]
The band released Happened in 1992,[4] followed by Aconteceu, Axé Music in 1993, Netinho's last album with Banda Beijo.[7] Netinho's first solo CD, Um Beijo pra Você was also released that year, with his cover of
Paulinho Nogueira's "Menina" not only becoming a major hit[4] but also appearing as Amanda's theme in the Globo TV soap opera Tropicaliente.[8] The album became his first
platinum record[3] in Brazil and first gold record in
Chile.[9]
In 1994, he released Nada Vai Nos Separar[4] and the song "Como" became Sheila's theme on História de Amor.[8]Netinho - Ao Vivo!, his next album, was mastered at
Bernie Grundman's studio in
Los Angeles[10] and reached diamond status, with more than 1.5 million copies sold.[3] The song "Caso Sério," as well as a cover of
Caetano Veloso's "Você É Linda" from Alguém Cantando Caetano, were used in Malhação in 1996.[11] His next album, Me Leva, went platinum[4] and the song "Milla" continues to be one of Netinho's most popular songs.[3] It was used on Corpo Dourado in 1998[12][4][8] and in Segundo Sol in 2018.[11] "Pra Te Ter Aqui" was used as the theme song of Corpo Dourado[4][3] and he appeared in chapter 52 of the show on March 17, 1998.[citation needed]
Netinho returned to Brazil in 1998 to record[citation needed]Rádio Brasil[4] with PolyGram, followed by Clareou, which featured a mix of
Phil Collins' "
Against All Odds", which became the song "Forever I Will Love You." "
'O surdato 'nnammurato" appeared on the soundtrack of Terra Nostra. His song "Indecisão" appeared in Andando nas Nuvens. The same year, Netinho relaunched Banda Beijo, this time with singer
Gilmelândia. He appeared on the 1999 compilation album A Arca dos Bichos by Captain Music. As the market for
axé diminished in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Netinho moved to Portugal, where he found more success. In 2000, he took his electric trio to
Lisbon to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Brazil. He performed "Química Perfeita" in Spanish with
Ivete Sangalo at a Carnival at
Parque das Nações in front of 80,000 people. The song appeared on As Filhas da Mãe.[citation needed] The following year, Netinho organized Portugal's first
micareta, drawing more than 200,000 people in just one weekend.[4]
In 2002, he performed at the Portugal Elétrico Festival and recorded the album Zuêra with
Universal Music, which reimagined
MPB songs as
dance-pop.[citation needed] Netinho took a year away from music to focus on himself and his family and returned the following year with what would become his next CD, Outra Versão. He began recording his first DVD, featuring other artists like Ivete Sangalo and
Ilê Aiyê.[4] His 2008 album Minha Praia was released by
Som Livre[citation needed] and featured "Tá Bom," a collaboration with
Carlinhos Brown,[4] and a cover of
Fábio Junior's "Caça e Caçador."[citation needed] He also released "Na Capoeira" for Carnival.[4] In 2009, he celebrated the 20th anniversary of his career, appeared on Domingão do Faustão, and recorded his next CD/DVD Netinho and Caixa Mágica[4] at the Hotel Parque dos Coqueiros in Aracaju along with
Banda Eva's
Saulo Fernandes, Cheiro de Amor's Alinne Rosa, Tomate, D'Black, and Jorge Vercillo (who participated virtually). In 2009 and 2010, he released two
work songs, "Extrapolou" and "Apertadinho," as well as their music videos.
Between 1997 and 2003, Netinho was married to journalist Mariana Trindade, with whom he had a daughter, Bruna, in 2000.[3][13] In a 2008 interview with Quem, Netinho openly identified as
bisexual.[14][15] In 2020, he criticized the
LGBT movement, comparing the impact of LGBT inclusion in the
Bahian Carnival to
Sodom and Gomorrah. He added that "if these LGBT people didn't live according to the fiofó [anus], because they live like that, thinking about the fiofó, they would be running Brazil today along with
Jair, supporting Jair, it would be wonderful."[16] He shared that he decided to
abstain from sex starting in 2016 and that his bisexuality had been "resolved."[17] However, in a 2019
Facebook post condemning the
same-sex kiss in Avengers: The Children's Crusade #9, he wrote: "I'm a man, bisexual, father, family, conservative, honest, dignified, sincere, fulfilled and very happy. No more."[18] In 2017, he became a vegan.[19]
Netinho became a conservative in 2016 and is a strong supporter of former
president of BrazilJair Bolsonaro.[20][21][22] In 2020,[23] he created the Aliados Brasil Conservador (
lit: Conservatives Brazilian Allies) association to support him.[24] He also ran for federal deputy of
Bahia in the
2022 election, which he did from the
Liberal Party platform.[25][26][27] In 2023, Clube de Aracaju cancelled one of Netinho's shows after he made an Instagram post supporting "the criminal acts promoted by supporters of former president Jair Bolsonaro." The singer subsequently complained that he was being
cancelled by his social networks.[28]
In 2018, the writers of the song "Milla," Manno Góes and Tuca Fernandes, criticized Netinho for using the song at pro-Bolsonaro rallies.[29] Góes sought an
injunction requiring
Carla Zambelli to remove the video of Netinho's performance of the song on grounds of unauthorized use of the song for political purposes.[30] Netinho sued Góes in return for "abusive conduct" and "offensive statements," requesting that posts calling him anti-democratic, a criminal, and a "coup plotter" be removed.[31][32]
Health
Netinho was admitted to the hospital on April 24, 2013 after a biopsy[33] revealed
adenomas in his liver. He suffered a series of strokes, three of which happened in the same week, that confined him to
Hospital Sírio-Libanês for four months. During that time, he spent three months in an
induced coma and also temporarily lost his voice, memory, and the ability to move.[34][35][36][37] While there, he met Maria, former president
Lula's sister, who was also in the hospital. He was readmitted in 2014 for six months for
depression and
suicidal ideation.[38] He appeared on Domingão do Faustão in 2014 to discuss this.[39] He had a
cerebral shunt removed in 2015,[40] followed by a combined four
cardiac shunts installed in 2015 and 2016.[41] He was admitted to the hospital in 2019 after his annual checkup to have heart surgery for a small
fatty plaque on his heart[42] and underwent surgery for another cardiac shunt.[41]
In 2017, Netinho posted on
Instagram about how he was prescribed
anabolic androgenic steroids for
testosterone deficiency to cure his
varicocele in 2010 or 2011, and attributed his lengthy illnesses to its use. He publicly condemned treatment he received from Dr. Mohamad Barakat and said he would be writing a book about the malpractice.[43] Barakat sued him for moral damages in 2016 after the post.[44] Barakat lost the case after the judge determined Netinho's right to share facts about his own medical experiences.[45][46]
Discography
Studio albums
Um Beijo Pra Você (1993)
Nada Vai Nos Separar (1994)
Netinho (1995)
Me Leva (1997)
Rádio Brasil (1998)
Clareou (1999)
Corpo & Cabeça (2000)
Outra Versão (2005)
Minha Praia (2008)
Uma Noite no Forró Elétrico (2012)
Beats, Baladas & Balanços (2014)
Live albums
Netinho ao Vivo! (1996)
Terra Carnavális (2001)
Por Inteiro (2006)
Netinho e a Caixa Mágica (2010)
References
^
ab"Netinho" (in Portuguese). Brazilian Museum of Radio and Television. Retrieved April 5, 2023.