Released on , as the lead single from the album Lado B Lado A , " Minha Alma (A Paz Que Eu Não Quero) " is widely regarded as one of the most significant protest songs in Brazilian music history. Composed by Marcelo Yuka , then-drummer of O Rappa , the track fuses alternative rock, reggae, and hip-hop to deliver a sharp critique of social inequality and institutional violence. Core Themes and Lyrical Analysis
The music video is a landmark in Brazilian audiovisual history, becoming the in 2000 with six wins, including Video of the Year. Minha alma (A paz que eu nГЈo quero)
This metaphor critiques the "gated community" mentality. It suggests that the bars built for protection from the "outside" world actually imprison the people inside, physically and mentally isolating them from social reality. Released on , as the lead single from
Directed by Kátia Lund and Breno Silveira, the video depicts police brutality against young Black men in the favelas, making the lyrical themes of state repression and structural racism explicit. This metaphor critiques the "gated community" mentality
The song explores the concept of a "false peace" maintained through silence and fear.
A Remastered 4K version was released in 2024 to preserve its high-impact cinematography. Cultural Impact and Legacy O Rappa: Minha Alma (A Paz que Eu Não Quero) - IMDb
The central thesis of the song argues that a quiet society is not necessarily a peaceful one. If that silence is born from repression or fear of speaking out, it is merely a tool for social control.