Chris Norman - Wild Angel - Anjo Selvagem - Tradu O May 2026

In the end, Wild Angel is not a love song. It is a surrender song. And in Portuguese, that surrender sounds just a little bit sweeter, and a little bit sadder.

The Portuguese translation, while faithful to the core metaphor, tilts the axis. The word Selvagem carries a heavier weight than "wild." It implies savage , untamed , from the jungle —a primal, almost dangerous beauty. While the English version focuses on the action of the woman (she runs, she leaves), the Portuguese version focuses on the state of being . Chris Norman - Wild Angel - Anjo Selvagem - tradu o

Whether you hear the open-road twang of the English original or the nocturnal, novelistic whisper of the Portuguese version, the core remains. It is a hymn to the person who will never be fully yours—and the strange, beautiful agony of loving them anyway. In the end, Wild Angel is not a love song

The lyrics paint the portrait of a woman who is a paradox. She is "an angel in the morning" but "the devil in the night." Norman’s delivery is that of a man exhausted yet exhilarated. He sings of a love that is not safe. It is a storm system—destructive but necessary. "You’re a restless river running to the sea / You keep me guessing what you’re gonna be." Here, the "wildness" is external. It is about movement, unpredictability, and the chase. The protagonist is a cowboy figure trying to rope a hurricane. The Portuguese translation, while faithful to the core