Desencontro is a beautiful Portuguese word that literally means an 'un-meeting' or 'failed encounter'. It's formed by adding the prefix des- (which implies negation or reversal) to encontro (meeting).
In the song, it perfectly describes the core theme: a relationship breakdown due to a fundamental mismatch or disconnection. The singer points out "Há um desencontro" (There is a disconnection), highlighting the sad reality that she and her partner are simply not on the same wavelength.
“Boa Sorte (Good Luck)” feels like reading the last page of a love story, but with the ink still wet. Vanessa da Mata and Ben Harper trade lines in Portuguese and English, blending tenderness with honesty as they admit the romance is over. The chorus “é só isso… acabou… boa sorte” is a gentle goodbye: no angry outbursts, just a sincere wish for the other person’s happiness. Yet beneath the calm tone lies a heavy truth—the relationship became suffocating, loaded with demais… pesado… irreais expectativas. Their duet turns the breakup into a soulful conversation, showing that even sweet words cannot fix feelings that refuse to change.
Hope flickers in the darkness of the goodbye. The singers encourage each other to heal, to notice “tantas pessoas especiais” waiting beyond this failed connection. The repeated image of “falling into the night” captures that scary but exciting plunge into the unknown once love ends. In the end, the song reminds us that a good breakup means accepting limits, wishing the other well, and trusting that a “bom encontro” will eventually happen for two people ready to meet halfway. It is a bittersweet anthem for anyone brave enough to close a chapter with grace and step into the night searching for new light.
Vanessa da Mata is one of Brazil's most beloved singer-songwriters, known for her warm voice and her blend of MPB (Popular Brazilian Music) with pop, soul and reggae. Born in 1976 in the small town of Alto Garças, in the state of Mato Grosso, she taught herself music while growing up on a rich mix of Brazilian classics and international sounds. Over the 2000s she became a household name in Brazil, and she has since won a Latin Grammy Award and published her own novels.
"Boa Sorte / Good Luck" comes from her 2007 album "Sim" and is a duet with the American musician Ben Harper. She sang the melody to him over the phone, and he answered her Portuguese verses in English, giving the song its striking bilingual back and forth. The single reached number one in both Brazil and Portugal and opened the door to her international career.