Professional Samba experiences Rio de Janeiro: Class + Night Tour – This Samba experience is very interesting so you can have a one-hour samba class and afterward, you take private transportation with your instructor and go to a samba club with a live band. Easy, Safe, and Fun! Usually, our tour starts at 7.00 pm. You arrive at our studio by yourself and after one hour of dance class, we get private transportation to enjoy a great night in Rio. You will have our tour guide with you for 3 hours. Tickets to the club are included and on the way back you choose what time and our guide help you to find transportation back so you can have a great samba experience with us. Find even more details at Samba tour Rio de Janeiro.
Boosts Heart & Mental Health – Samba is an aerobic exercise. This means that it promotes cardiovascular health as it is a great way to get your blood flowing and oxygenate your body. At the same time, it gives you a feeling of well-being, helping you improve your mental health. Improves Muscle Strength – All that dancing pays off. Dancing samba puts many muscles to work, which over time, leads to increased muscle strength. Stronger muscles help your body look more toned and defined. Are you ready to Samba? The more you dance, the more benefits you’ll see.
Passistas – Carnival’s leading samba dancers – They are usually on the sound truck behind the percussionists or find their way marching along with the school down the runway. One of the most important elements in the samba school parade is the rhythm and the lyrics of the theme song. The song must energize the dancers and the audience generating an intense desire to dance. The song must be related to the chosen theme and this theme should also be represented in the costumes, floats, and wings. This wing is dedicated exclusively to those women who have toiled for many years preparing their samba school for Carnival after Carnival. It is a way for the younger generations to show their appreciation for all the love and support these wonderful ladies have given to their samba school.
Visiting Christ the Redeemer is one of the most popular things to do in Rio de Janeiro, with over 800,000 people visiting annually. Be prepared for crowds at the top. To avoid long queues for the train, book your tickets in advance online and select a time. Another option for getting to the top is taking a van ride, which is cheaper but far less scenic and enjoyable. It’s hard to imagine a more perfectly placed mountain than Sugarloaf. Just slightly offshore from mainland Rio de Janeiro, this towering monolith provides sweeping views of the city and across to Christ the Redeemer. At the top, you’ll find multiple viewing platforms, most of which are protected from the punishing equatorial sun. Views also extend to Rio’s famed harbor with the Ponte Pres. Costa e Silva bridge in the foreground and back towards Copacabana and Christ the Redeemer.
If you’ve had enough of the urban beat of Rio de Janeiro and crave a bit of nature, take a trip over to the Botanical Gardens. The wide trails under the canopy of green are well-maintained and provide an oasis of calm and a pleasant change from the concrete jungle nearby. The gardens are a UNESCO World Biosphere site and are home to over 8,000 species of plant life. Trails are well marked in English and be sure to follow the signs to both the Orchidarium, an iron-and-glass greenhouse built in the 1930s, and the Japanese Gardens. Note that an admission fee is charged to enter and at the time of writing only cash was accepted. If you have visited the beaches of Copacabana and Ipanema and still crave more, but at the same time are looking for something a bit different, take the 20-kilometer jaunt down to Prainha. Where the rainforest meets the ocean, this beach is more natural than the ones in the heart of Rio.
Choreography at its best! Each samba school presents a theme which is portrayed by a team of musicians, samba dancers, and well-decorated floats. Months of preparation are put in by the samba schools who mobilize the support of thousands of locals from their communities. At the forefront of the preparations is the Carnvalesco or Carnival Director who sets the theme and organizes practically everything required for the parade right from the costume designs, decorations, theme song, and much more. For the samba parade, each school is divided into sections called ‘alas’ or wings, with each wing consisting of 100 members or more wearing the same costume. In some samba schools, each wing will choreograph their own dance that they practice for months prior to the Carnival. While the dance does contribute to the overall score, the dancers must be upbeat, and happy and sing their samba school song throughout the parade.
Carnival Tour shows you behind the scenes. Be introduced to the Samba schools that create all the props. Carnival Tour also will give you the opportunity to try on glimmering outfits to know what it feels like to move your body in the frills enjoy a short samba class with the incredible Passista who is a professional samba dancer. You buy the ticket with us and go there by yourself. We have a good deal with Viator, so the link below will take you to book your experience. Read extra info on https://www.riosambadancer.com/.