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Thirty years and thousands of miles away from home, Brazil's Os Mutantes have incited an unlikely frenzy for the sounds of São Paulo in the '60s. Their "Austin Powers" meets "Black Orpheus" vibe has been thrilling alt.rock fans and world music buffs alike since original Mutantes imports first trickled into specialty record shops. Now this greatest-hits disc, compiled by David Byrne, should be one of the most crowd-pleasing releases of the year. And why not? Fin de siècle fancies for bizarre sonic experiments, Latin rhythms, and retro everything collide in the perfect pop of this trio, who exploded in a psychedelic storm at the beginning of Brazil's Tropicalia movement. Alongside Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and Tom Zé, the brothers Baptista (Arnaldo and Sérgio) and Rita Lee Jones made music as a political statement. But Os Mutantes, in their Beatles-fascinated, stoned-immaculate aspirations toward pop-dom, need far less translation than poets like Veloso and theoreticians like Zé. Their sound is equally at home alongside Santana as Esquivel; their technicolor tropical images happily jammed between Tom Jobim and The Monkees. Culling the band's most rhythmic material, from the faux cha-cha "El Cantor de Mambo" (inspired by Sergio Mendes) to Gilberto Gil's samba rock "A Minha Menina" and Caetano's naif bossa nova "Baby" (in two versions), EVERYTHING IS POSSIBLE! is the perfect passport to this summer's hippest scene. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble