Key Points
The Sunday headline is fixed and indoors: a “Tributo Raul Seixas” with Sylvio Passos & Putos Brothers Band at Blue Note SP, one show at 19h.
It’s bone dry — about 26°C and 0% rain by day — but São Paulo’s night cools to near 16°C, so carry a layer.
Sylvio Passos was Raul Seixas’s close friend and founded his official fan club, so this tribute is about as close to the source as it gets.
Vila do Samba runs its Sunday session in Casa Verde from 16h to 23h, the traditional samba de raiz wind-down.
The World Cup spine has receded — Brazil’s group stage is done, so tonight is the normal live-music circuit, not a match night.
Rio shares the same warm afternoon but a milder evening near 21°C; São Paulo’s cool Sunday night favours an indoor room.
Tonight in São Paulo
It’s a Sunday, and the day is dry and warm — around 26°C with no rain — though São Paulo cools fast after dark, toward 16°C. The night has one clear, indoor anchor: a Raul Seixas tribute at Blue Note on Avenida Paulista.
The real choice is mood, not weather. Blue Note offers a seated, single-show tribute at 19h; Vila do Samba, up in Casa Verde, runs a looser samba de raiz session from the afternoon.
One is a recital, the other a roda — both close out the weekend.
Three picks frame it: Blue Note SP (Paulista, ticketed, 7pm) for the Raul Seixas tribute; Vila do Samba (Casa Verde, 4pm–11pm) for traditional samba; and Ó do Borogodó (Pinheiros, opens 7pm) as the tiny, fill-fast roda alternative.
If You Only Do One Thing HIGH
Go to the Raul Seixas tribute at Blue Note. Sylvio Passos founded Raul’s official fan club, so this single 19h show is the rare tribute with a direct line to the source — confirmed on the venue’s weekly.
Do you prefer the wheel? Vila do Samba’s root samba runs all evening.
Blue Note São Paulo
The São Paulo outpost of the New York jazz institution, on the Conjunto Nacional’s second floor over Avenida Paulista. Tonight it hosts “Tributo Raul Seixas” with Sylvio Passos & Putos Brothers Band — a single Sunday show at 19h, confirmed on the venue’s dated weekly programme.
Passos was a close friend of Raul Seixas and founded his official fan club, so the set leans on the catalogue’s pillars — songs like “Maluco Beleza” and “Metamorfose Ambulante.” It’s the seated, indoor anchor on a cool Sunday night. Book through Eventim.
Samba Village
The traditional Zona Norte samba house, running a Sunday session from 16h to 23h — an afternoon-into-evening samba de raiz roda rather than the louder Saturday pagode. Its own site confirms the Sunday hours; check the door for the day’s act and cover.
House rules hold every day: over-18s only, RG (photo ID) required at the door, and no national-team shirts. It isn’t metro-walkable, so plan an Uber.
This is the communal, roots-samba way to close the weekend.
Oh of Borogodó
A tiny, beloved Pinheiros bar dedicated to samba de raiz and choro since 2001, with a roomful of regulars and a roda that spills energy. On Sundays it opens at 19h and entry runs about R$25; the space is small and fills fast, so arrive early for a table.
It’s the intimate, no-frills counterpoint to Blue Note’s polish — closer to the floor, cheaper, and unapologetically roots. If the bigger picks are full or you want a proper roda, this is the Pinheiros answer.
Blue Note São Paulo hosts a Raul Seixas tribute on Avenida Paulista this Sunday. (Photo internet reproduction)RTAsk Rio TimesWhat to do, where to go in São Paulo›
Anchor route Paulista headline — Blue Note’s 19h Raul Seixas tribute, then a short Uber or walk for a drink nearby.
Alternative Zona Norte roots — Vila do Samba’s Sunday session from 16h, an easy afternoon-into-evening.
Double Show then roda — Blue Note at 19h, then Ó do Borogodó in Pinheiros to keep the samba going.
São Paulo’s Sunday closes early. Vila do Samba wraps by 23h, Blue Note’s single show is done well before midnight, and Ó do Borogodó runs latest of the three.
This is a wind-down night, not a 4am one — plan the evening around the 19h start times.
Tomorrow is a mild Monday near 25°C with around 10% rain, an easy start to the week. São Paulo’s Monday samba is quieter, so tonight’s roots sets are the weekend’s real send-off.
Avenida Paulista anchors São Paulo’s Sunday, with Blue Note on the Conjunto Nacional. (Photo internet reproduction)
Blue Note Metro Brigadeiro or Trianon-MASP (Green Line), short walk on Paulista; central and easy.
Vila do Samba Not metro-walkable; Uber about R$30–40 from Paulista to Casa Verde.
Ó do Borogodó Metro Fradique Coutinho, a short walk into Pinheiros.
Surge Sunday surge is light, but rides from Casa Verde can be scarcer — pre-book the trip back.
Metro SP’s metro runs reduced Sunday hours; check the last train or plan an Uber home.
Weather Dry at 0% rain, but the night dips near 16°C — bring a layer.
Safety Paulista and Pinheiros are busy and safe; in Casa Verde, ride door-to-door.
If the picks are full, Pinheiros and Vila Madalena have Sunday rodas worth a walk-up, and several samba bars open for an early feijoada-and-music afternoon. Casa de Francisca in the Centro is usually a weeknight room, so check its agenda before counting on it tonight.
Over in Rio tonight, the afternoon is just as warm but the evening stays balmy near 21°C, so Rio’s Sunday runs outdoors and free — Pedra do Sal’s open-air roda from 18h and Bip Bip’s Sunday samba. SP leans indoors; Rio leans out.
See our Rio guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need tickets in advance for the Raul Seixas tribute at Blue Note?
Yes — buy ahead through Eventim, the official seller. Blue Note is a seated, reservation-style room, and a tribute to a figure as beloved as Raul Seixas can draw well, so a walk-up on the night is a gamble.
Tonight’s show is a single 19h performance rather than the usual double-bill, which means fewer seats overall across the evening. The venue’s own box office charges no service fee if you’d rather buy in person earlier in the day, but online is simplest.
Arrive in good time so you’re settled before it starts; latecomers can struggle to get a good spot in a full house.
Who is Sylvio Passos, and why does this tribute matter?
Sylvio Passos was a close personal friend of Raul Seixas for decades and founded the singer’s official fan club, becoming one of the most dedicated keepers of his memory and catalogue. That direct connection is what sets this tribute apart from a generic covers night: it comes from someone who knew the artist and has spent a lifetime researching and preserving his work.
With the Putos Brothers Band, the set runs through the pillars of Raul’s songbook — the anthems that still cross generations in Brazil. For anyone curious about a defining figure in Brazilian rock, it’s about as close to the source as a tribute can get.
How do I get to Vila do Samba on a Sunday, and what are the rules?
Vila do Samba is in Casa Verde, in the Zona Norte, and it isn’t within easy walking distance of a metro station, so the simplest plan is an Uber — roughly R$30–40 from the Paulista area, door to door both ways. On Sundays the house runs from 16h to 23h, an afternoon-into-evening session, so you can arrive in daylight.
Three firm rules apply at the door: over-18s only, you must show RG or photo ID, and national-team football shirts aren’t allowed in. Check the entrance for the day’s specific act and cover, since Sunday programming can differ from the louder Saturday pagode.
Is São Paulo’s Sunday night cold enough for a jacket?
The afternoon will feel pleasant — highs around 26°C and no rain at all — but don’t be fooled into leaving a layer behind. São Paulo sits on a plateau and loses heat quickly once the sun goes down, and tonight the temperature slides back toward 16°C by the time the evening shows start.
Indoors at Blue Note you won’t notice, but you’ll feel it walking Paulista, queuing outside Ó do Borogodó, or in any open or semi-covered space at Vila do Samba. A light jacket is the right call.
Rain isn’t the concern tonight at zero percent — it’s purely the cool night air.
Is the World Cup still shaping São Paulo nightlife?
Not anymore. Brazil wrapped up its group stage on June 24, and with the group phase finished the World Cup has receded from the everyday nightlife picture in São Paulo.
The big watch-party venues that pulled crowds during the group matches have gone quiet, and the city’s music rooms and samba houses are back to their usual programming. Expect that to last until the knockout rounds heat up later in the tournament, when the larger fan zones will switch back on.
For this Sunday, treat it as a normal live-music night and plan around the venues — Blue Note, the samba houses — rather than a fixture.
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