Feeling lucky today? Mariana Nolasco’s Dia de Sorte is a breezy celebration of letting the wind carry you exactly where you need to be. The singer admires people who travel light—physically and emotionally—ready to leap high, chase the sunrise, and melt in its warmth. She invites us to see life everywhere we look, from the shifting shapes of clouds to the promise of a brand-new dawn. Think of it as a musical reminder that courage and curiosity often go hand in hand.
At the heart of the song is a sweet request: “Amor, só me abraça forte.” On this “lucky day,” love becomes both a safety net and a launchpad, helping her remember what it feels like to fly. When she asks her partner to remind her how to soar, she’s really asking all of us to hold on to our dreams, trust the moment, and keep our eyes on the sky—because every day has the potential to be a dia de sorte if we’re brave enough to jump.
Mariana Nolasco’s "Acredita" feels like sunshine in musical form: a rhythmic reminder that the way you see yourself shapes who you are. With warm vocals and a catchy hook, she puts a mirror in front of the listener and playfully asks, “Você acredita em você?” The song’s friendly tone makes self-reflection feel less like homework and more like a dance-floor challenge.
The repeated chant “Acredita” works like a motivational mantra. Nolasco urges you to stop waiting for a thumbs-up from others and start giving one to yourself. The message is simple yet powerful: believe first, and you become the person you imagine. It is an invitation to swap hesitation for self-confidence, proving that a single word—believe—can kick-start real transformation.
“Chá De Camomila” feels like opening the door to a cozy living room on a lazy afternoon. Mariana Nolasco sings about that irresistible urge to meet someone special, step inside, leave the lights on, and simply breathe together. Chamomile tea becomes her sweet metaphor for calm and care — the warm cup that slows down the rush of life while she shares gentle hugs, lingering gazes, and playful “para papas.”
At its heart, the song is an invitation to cherish simple, unhurried moments with the people we love. Mariana promises comfort, asks how the other person has been, and reminds us that life looks prettier when we take it one thing at a time. Overflowing with Brazilian warmth and soft acoustic vibes, “Chá De Camomila” is both a love note and a self-care checklist: breathe, relax, and let tenderness steep like your favorite herbal tea.
Do Raso Ao Fundo invites us to dive head-first into a love so deep it feels oceanic. Mariana Nolasco and MARO paint a picture of two souls who long to engrave each other on their very skin, to float in one another’s words, and to let the ebb and flow of emotion wash over them like rolling waves. Each line is drenched in vivid, tactile images—tattoos, roots, water, veins—that show how intensely the singers want to connect, from the surface splash to the hidden currents.
At its heart, the song is a celebration of surrendering to passion and finding self-discovery through intimacy. The narrator leaves home, combs through busy cityscapes, and searches every smile and conversation for traces of the beloved. Every “onda vai, onda vem” (wave goes, wave comes) reminds us that love is rhythmic and alive, carrying us outward to meet the other and inward to rediscover ourselves. With its gentle Portuguese poetry and lush melodies, the track feels like standing barefoot at the shoreline—inviting listeners to wade in, get soaked, and explore love from the shallow to the profound.
Wake up to compliments, brew a cup of sweet chamomile, and watch love sparkle on the bedroom wall – that is the cozy universe of “Viciado Em Mim.” Mariana Nolasco and Cynthia Luz paint a picture of a relationship so tender and magnetic that it feels like a beautiful habit. The singer relishes every whispered praise while realizing that her partner has become addicted to her presence. Everyday moments turn into tiny rituals: opening the window to a star-filled sky, arranging fresh flowers in the kitchen, and smiling at the idea of framing the silhouette of the one she loves.
Behind the gentle scenes lies a playful tug of war. She confesses to being a “refém da tua mente” (a hostage to your mind) even as she notices her own reflection in him. The lyrics celebrate mutual fascination, the calm that a beloved voice can bring, and the power to shape “forever” into whatever they choose. In short, the song is a sweet ode to being irresistibly drawn to someone who feels equally hooked on you, turning simple daily life into a never-ending love high.
Imagine setting sail on a calm, endless ocean with someone who makes your heart skip a beat. That is exactly where “Alto Mar” places us: out in the open sea, far from routines and clocks, where every gentle wave mirrors the warmth of a new love. Mariana Nolasco and Vitor Kley celebrate a connection so light and genuine that even the soul begs the moment to last. From the very first line, the singers admit they do not want to “economize” on kisses; they would rather dive in headfirst, no pretending, trusting their intuition that this feeling is real and good.
The chorus is a simple wish: nothing more than being well together and watching the other person “blossom in life’s garden.” The ocean becomes a perfect metaphor for freedom, spontaneity, and shared adventure, while “probability of being good” turns love into both a heartfelt promise and a playful calculation that always works in their favor. In short, “Alto Mar” is a sun-soaked anthem to jumping in, following your heart, and letting love flow without fear.
Planeta Borboleta paints a dreamy, cosmic landscape where love is a whole new world—or rather, a whole new planet. Mariana Nolasco wonders about the color, the flower, and even the pain that inhabit this distant place where her loved one now hides. Comets crash, butterflies fly away, and violet hues glow, all to illustrate how unique and irreplaceable that shared universe once felt.
Beneath the celestial imagery lies a simple yet powerful feeling: saudade, the deep Brazilian word for longing. The singer misses her partner, misses herself when she was with them, and aches to merge their "planets" once more. The song turns every color, flower, and letter into a keepsake of a love that is far away but still alive in memory—inviting listeners to travel through space and emotion at the same time.
Who is that radiant stranger staring back at you from the mirror? In "Quem É Ela?" Mariana Nolasco turns a simple question into a joyful journey of self-discovery. Each verse paints the portrait of a woman who is adventurous, faith-filled, and unafraid to chase love and freedom. She hops on planes without a return ticket, believes in miracles, wipes away her tears, and dances the sadness off the floor. The repeated question “Quem é ela que me vê?” invites us to recognize that this fearless heroine is not someone else. She is the truest, brightest version of ourselves, waiting to be noticed.
The song is a celebration of self-love, inner strength, and authenticity. It reminds learners that real beauty is “bem mais do que eu vejo”—far more than what meets the eye. By the final chorus, we realize the answer is simple: Ela é quem eu sou (“She is who I am”). Turn up the volume, sing along, and let Mariana’s warm Brazilian pop groove guide you toward the empowering discovery that the best companion on your adventures is the confident soul already living inside you.
Anunciação – Sessions invites you into a sun-kissed daydream where love is announced long before it even arrives. In Mariana Nolasco’s gentle voice, we picture a rider galloping through a light morning mist, chest bare, hair flying, while the sun brightens clothes on a backyard clothesline. Nature itself seems to celebrate this approach, and the singer feels it in every breeze: an angelic whisper promises that a new passion will step into her life on a peaceful Sunday morning.
The repeated lines “Tu vens, eu já escuto os teus sinais” (“You’re coming, I already hear your signs”) capture the song’s heart-fluttering anticipation. Church bells, sunlight, and the rustle of wind become messengers of hope, turning ordinary moments into sparkling omens. Rather than waiting passively, the singer joyfully proclaims her beloved’s arrival to the whole world, confident that destiny is already on its way. It’s a poetic celebration of intuition, faith, and the thrilling certainty that love is just around the corner.
“Era Amor” feels like opening an old photo album of a passionate relationship that burned bright and loud. Mariana Nolasco sings from the perspective of someone who walked away the second the clock ran out, only to realize her heart stayed behind. The lyrics replay explosive Wednesday-night arguments that had the neighbors packing their bags, yet label those clashes as proof of real love. Every chorus circles back to the confession that even their noisy confusion was still amar — true, imperfect, all-consuming affection.
At its core, the song is a love letter wrapped in regret and hope. She admits she left without breath to explain herself, but promises she never meant to leave for good. Whenever her partner feels lost, she reminds them, “Tô aqui” — “I’m here.” The message is simple and powerful: love can be messy, loud, and complicated, but it remains a magnetic force that pulls two people back together, no matter the distance or the doubts.
“Lá De Onde Eu Vim” is Mariana Nolasco’s warm postcard to the place that shaped her heart. Through vivid snapshots—bare-foot adventures, rain-soaked laughter, birds celebrating the sunrise—she celebrates a hometown where everything is made with love. The lyrics paint a picture of sincere smiles, transparent people, and wisdom that lies in keeping life simple. Every verse drips with nostalgia: she misses the street games, the harmless butterflies in her stomach, and the freedom that felt as easy as dancing under a summer shower.
At its core, the song is a gentle reminder that our roots give us priceless values. Mariana thanks her village, her friends, and her childhood memories for the treasures she now carries in her chest. Even when she has to leave, a piece of her will stay right there, alive in the memories of the people she loves. Listening to this song is like opening a sunlit window onto a watercolor horizon where joy is always welcome and authenticity never fades.
From the very first line, "Certeza" feels like a warm breeze of optimism. Mariana Nolasco sings about the magical moment when two people lock eyes and everything suddenly makes sense. That instant gives the narrator a crystal-clear certeza (certainty) that they have found the person who brings peace, confidence, and a reason to believe in love again. The gentle melody mirrors this calm assurance, wrapping the listener in the same serenity the singer feels.
Look a little closer and the song becomes a quiet manifesto for choosing love over chaos. Mariana contrasts a world where “tanta gente… não sabe pra onde vai” (so many people do not know where they are going) with the simple, powerful decision to open one’s heart. Minor “besteiras” and daily “loucuras pequenas” often block us from happiness, but the chorus insists that real life begins when we dare to trust, to surrender, and to truly viver (live). In just a few heartfelt verses, “Certeza” reminds learners that certainty is not about having all the answers, but about recognizing the right feeling and holding on tight.
“Poemas Que Colori” paints the roller-coaster feelings of loving someone who is full of contradictions. Mariana Nolasco describes a partner who mixes half-truths with harmless mischief, drifts in and out of her life, hurts her then returns with a disarming smile. Instead of breaking, she turns every confusing moment—late-night talks, silly jokes, gentle hugs—into vibrant “poems” that she colors with her own emotions.
The song celebrates the power of the heart to transform imperfections into art. Even when the relationship feels like a game of come-and-go, the singer chooses to focus on the tenderness hidden behind the chaos, proving that love can turn everyday chatter into lyrical beauty.
“Me Sinto Eu” is a warm, acoustic love note in which Brazilian singer Mariana Nolasco and guest vocalist Pedro Pascual celebrate that magical moment when affection sneaks up on you. The lyrics paint a picture of two people who, almost by accident, start to understand each other so deeply that their lives click into place. Even before they meet face to face, their thoughts and feelings line up, turning everyday conversation into poetic verses and straightening what once felt crooked.
The heart of the song beats in the chorus: “Com você me sinto eu” – “With you I feel like myself.” By finding the other person, each singer finally finds their own true self. The repeated lines about “trying to find myself” and “trying to guess you” underline a journey of self-discovery that only reaches its destination when love arrives. In short, this duet is a gentle reminder that the right connection doesn’t only give us butterflies – it gives us back our most authentic selves.
In “Sons de Amor” (Sounds of Love), Brazilian singer-songwriter Mariana Nolasco teams up with rapper Rael to paint a vivid picture of love that transforms everyday life. The song opens with a tender wish: to be surrounded by a partner’s smile and gentle whispers. That simple desire blossoms into a declaration that real love is sacred, genuine, and unbreakable. Rael’s verses show the change this feeling sparks in him—he swaps late-night partying for clear-headed focus, trades wandering for purpose, and realizes that the happiness he searched for was always in the other person’s embrace.
Throughout the track, the artists remind us that love is more than words. It is heard in quiet moments, felt in unspoken understanding, and powerful enough to drown out past pain. The chorus repeats like a heartbeat, reinforcing the idea that true connection invades the soul, fills every space with joy, and creates a private soundtrack of affection. Listeners are left with a warm invitation: celebrate the simple sounds of love and let them guide you toward a brighter, more centered life.
Feel the gentle breeze of self-discovery in Mariana Nolasco’s “Deixei.”
In this reflective pop-folk gem, the Brazilian singer invites us on a journey from fear to freedom. She begins by letting time reveal her true self, trading anxiety for openness to love. A single flower changes her perspective: where she once saw dor (pain), she now spots beleza (beauty). Instead of blurting out her emotions at the wrong moment, she safeguards them, trusting that her heart will find its own way to peace—a peace she once believed was just an illusion.
The chorus glows with a simple insight: “If only you knew how I feel now… to live, there is no set hour.” It is a reminder that life and love refuse to follow a strict timetable. By the final lines, she carries her feelings close, knowing they might be discarded if left in another’s hands. “Deixei” is ultimately a song about owning your emotions, embracing the present, and realizing that true inner calm arrives when we listen to ourselves first.
Mariana Nolasco and Mar Aberto invite us into a heart-warming tale where love turns winter into summer. The singer starts in a landscape of chilly loneliness and empty days, then boom—your arrival fills the room with heat, color, and laughter. Every smile you share feels like the sky cracking open to let sunlight pour through, transforming routine moments into glowing memories.
Beyond the cozy imagery, the song reaches for the stars—literally. By promising to "devolver pro teu céu constelação," the narrator vows to give back the same light she received, painting her partner’s night sky with constellations of gratitude and devotion. It is a gentle celebration of mutual care, where two voices blend like galaxies colliding, leaving listeners wrapped in the sweet certainty that love can brighten the universe around us.
Close your eyes and imagine rewinding time to those carefree days when you and your friends could dream without checking the clock. That is the bittersweet universe Mariana Nolasco opens in “Tudo Fora De Lugar.” Through tender Portuguese verses, she contrasts the slow, hope-filled pace of the past with today’s frantic rush, where loved ones drift apart and every plan feels scatter-brained. The chorus sighs, “Tudo fora de lugar”— everything out of place— capturing the uneasy feeling of living fast yet feeling lost.
Yet the song is not pure melancholy. Mariana personifies time as a mother who both takes and gives, reminding us that even while we mourn what slipped away, new peace can still arrive. Her message is a gentle nudge to pause, breathe, and remember that the same unstoppable clock that steals our carefree moments can also reunite us if we dare to slow down and reconnect. Let the melody pull you into reflection, then send you back out with a fresh resolve to savor every second.
Pra Todas As Mulheres bursts onto the scene like a vibrant street protest set to melody. Mariana Nolasco calls out centuries of silencing and then flips the script, inviting every woman—“Marianas, índias, brancas, negras, pardas, indianas”—to raise her voice in unity. The song’s heartbeat is a plea for respect and a declaration that the old, irrational patriarchal era has an expiration date. By repeating the line “abafaram nossa voz, mas se esqueceram de que não estamos sós” (they muffled our voice, but they forgot we are not alone), Mariana reminds listeners that collective strength is louder than any attempt to quiet it.
Listening feels like joining a chorus that travels from living rooms to city squares, carrying the “encanto de ser livre” (the enchantment of being free). It is both a gentle hug and a rallying cry: sing out, speak up, and never again fall silent. Whether you are practicing your English or fueling your courage, this track delivers a powerful lesson—freedom and equality sound even better in harmony.
“Que Seja Pra Ficar” feels like a whispered love spell. Mariana Nolasco sings about a heart that slips in quietly, settles down before anyone notices, and fills her world with a calm that feels almost mystical. The lyrics name-check Xangô and Iemanjá—powerful Afro-Brazilian deities—hinting that this newfound peace might be blessed by forces greater than ordinary romance.
The message is simple yet powerful: if love is coming in, let it stay, and let destiny unfold on its own. The chorus repeats like a gentle mantra, inviting listeners to trust the soft, steady rhythm of genuine affection. It’s a song for anyone who’s felt surprise at how quickly a tranquil love can take root and transform everything into serenity.
“Fico Só” is a sweet musical snapshot of that moment when you have fallen head-over-heels and simply do not want the night to end. Mariana Nolasco invites her special someone to stay a little longer, while every detail around them—soft rain, blooming flowers, the glow on a face—turns into poetry. The singer’s heart is overflowing with “millions of things to say,” yet she is left in a quiet reverie, watching, waiting, and replaying memories like a movie in her mind.
Behind the gentle guitar and intimate vocals lies a universal feeling: the mix of joy and longing that follows new love. “Eu fico só” repeats like a mantra, capturing both solitude and devotion. Even when she is physically alone, her world is colored by the thought of that person—every raindrop and petal seems to resemble them. The song reminds us that love can make ordinary moments feel magical, turning waiting into a beautiful, hopeful pause.
Morena is a sun-kissed story of instant attraction. A cheeky laugh at the singer’s messy hair sparks a whirlwind conversation between two strangers from opposite sides of São Paulo. She is the confident girl from the upscale Zona Sul, he is the laid-back guy from the Zona Oeste, and together they radiate pure summer energy. In a blur of laughter, music, and blue-eyed smiles, they share an unforgettable night that feels like a living poem. The chorus freezes that perfect moment in time: a playful dance of stolen glances, a lifted skirt, and a kiss that seems to stop the world.
Yet every summer romance meets reality. The brunette beauty heads to Rio and accidentally—perhaps not so accidentally—takes his necklace with her. Distance complicates things, but the memory of that vibrant night keeps their hearts tied together. Whenever she sees the necklace, he hopes she will feel the same nostalgic pull he does. Morena celebrates the thrill of spontaneous connection, the bittersweet ache of separation, and the way a single night can echo like a favorite song long after the music fades.