Classroom lesson · Music · 🇧🇷 Brazil

Sertanejo - Brazilian country music

Acoustic guitars, sing-along tunes, and stories from the countryside

What is it?

Sertanejo is Brazil's version of country music. The word comes from 'sertão', meaning 'the countryside'. It is usually played by two singers harmonising together with acoustic guitars and an accordion. Sertanejo songs often tell stories about home, friendship, the countryside, and good days.

Tell me more

Sertanejo started in central Brazil, far from the coast - in the wide, dry farmland where people grew up working the land. The first sertanejo songs were sung by people on horseback or in farmhouses, accompanied by an acoustic guitar called the viola caipira (which has 10 strings instead of 6).

Most sertanejo singers are duos - two voices singing together in tight harmony. Often the two singers are brothers or sisters, or best friends who've been singing together since childhood. The matching voices are one of the things that make sertanejo feel cosy and familiar.

Sertanejo is the most popular kind of music in Brazil today. Sertanejo concerts can fill stadiums with tens of thousands of fans, all singing along to every word. Many of the biggest sertanejo stars started out playing in tiny country bars before becoming famous.

If you want to spot a sertanejo song, listen for: two voices singing in harmony, an acoustic guitar, sometimes an accordion, and stories about love, friendship, the countryside, or the city missing the countryside. Songs you can sing along to are a big part of the style.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What makes a song easy to sing along to? Why do some songs feel like everyone already knows them?
  2. 02Sertanejo singers often sing in pairs. What do you think makes two voices together special?
  3. 03Lots of countries have a kind of 'country music' - music from the rural areas. Do you know any from where you live?
Try this

Classroom activity

Pair up. Pick a song you both know and try to sing the chorus together - one singing the tune, the other slightly above or below. Did it work? Did it feel different from singing alone?