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- Déjà-Vu is the third and currently last studio album by Brazilian band Metrô, released in 2002 by independent label Trama. Their first album of new material in 15 years after they first broke up, it reunited them with former vocalist Virginie Boutaud, who had been fired from the band in 1986. Original guitarist Alec Haiat decided not to partake in the band's reunion though due to his involvement with other projects at the time and other personal reasons, and so was replaced by André Fonseca. Xavier Leblanc, who was also very busy with his then-newly founded French bistro, La Tartine, only acted as a session member on the tracks "Achei Bonito" and "Johnny Love", being subsequently replaced by Pedro Albuquerque until the band separated again in 2004. Contrasting with the new wave sound the band had developed during its heyday in the mid-1980s, Déjà-Vu heads toward a much slower direction influenced by jazz and traditional Brazilian genres such as samba, bossa nova and MPB, and contains numerous covers of popular singers of such genres like Caetano Veloso, Jorge Ben Jor, Ary Barroso, Jair Rodrigues and . Re-recordings of some of their hits from the 1980s ("Sândalo de Dândi", "Johnny Love" and "Beat Acelerado") are also included. The album counts with many guest musicians, such as Waly Salomão (in one of his last credited works prior to his death one year after the album's release), Preta Gil, Otto, Lucas Santtana, Jorge Mautner and Nélson Jacobina. Remixes of four of the album's tracks by different DJs are included as bonus tracks. Music videos were made for the tracks "Resemblances", "Mensagem de Amor" and "Achei Bonito"; both were directed by producer Dany Roland's wife, filmmaker Bia Lessa. (en)
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- Wandering Heart (en)
- Aquarelle of Brazil (en)
- Dandy's Sandalwood (en)
- Fashion Boy (en)
- Fast Beat (en)
- I Think It's Beautiful (en)
- Love Message (en)
- Take My Samba Away (en)
- Who's That Black Girl? (en)
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- dbr:Charlie_Haden
- Herbert Vianna (en)
- Caetano Veloso (en)
- Alec Haiat, Yann Laouenan (en)
- Yann Laouenan (en)
- Ary Barroso (en)
- Andres Levin, Arto Lindsay, Melvin Gibbs (en)
- Ataulfo Alves (en)
- Dany Roland, Yann Laouenan (en)
- Evaldo Gouveia, Jair Amorim (en)
- Jorge Ben Jor (en)
- Sammy Cahn, Saul Chaplin (en)
- Vicente França, Yann Laouenan (en)
- Arr. by Dany Roland, Virginie Boutaud, Xavier Leblanc, Yann Laouenan (en)
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- Os Paralamas do Sucesso cover (en)
- Arto Lindsay cover (en)
- Ary Barroso cover; feat. Preta Gil (en)
- Ataulfo Alves cover; feat. Jorge Mautner (en)
- Caetano Veloso cover (en)
- Charlie Haden cover (en)
- Ella Fitzgerald cover (en)
- Jair Rodrigues cover (en)
- Jorge Ben Jor cover; feat. Preta Gil (en)
- feat. Otto and Waly Salomão (en)
- remix by Apollo 9 (en)
- remix by Bruno LT and Gustavo Garcia (en)
- remix by DJ Vu (en)
- remix by DJ Vu and Maga Bo (en)
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- Dany Roland, Yann Laouenan (en)
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- dbr:Beat_Acelerado
- dbr:Aquarela_do_Brasil
- Silence (en)
- Coração Vagabundo (en)
- Missing You (en)
- Déjà-Vu (en)
- Beat Acelerado (en)
- Sândalo de Dândi (en)
- Johnny Love (en)
- Achei Bonito (en)
- Everyone's Wrong but Me (en)
- Leva Meu Samba (en)
- Mensagem de Amor (en)
- Que Nêga É Essa? (en)
- Rapaz da Moda (en)
- Resemblances (en)
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- Déjà-Vu is the third and currently last studio album by Brazilian band Metrô, released in 2002 by independent label Trama. Their first album of new material in 15 years after they first broke up, it reunited them with former vocalist Virginie Boutaud, who had been fired from the band in 1986. Original guitarist Alec Haiat decided not to partake in the band's reunion though due to his involvement with other projects at the time and other personal reasons, and so was replaced by André Fonseca. Xavier Leblanc, who was also very busy with his then-newly founded French bistro, La Tartine, only acted as a session member on the tracks "Achei Bonito" and "Johnny Love", being subsequently replaced by Pedro Albuquerque until the band separated again in 2004. (en)
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- Déjà-Vu (Metrô album) (en)
- Déjà Vu (álbum do Metrô) (pt)
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