Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Carol Saboya - Belezas: The Music Of Ivan Lins and Milton Nascimento

Styles: Brazilian Jazz, Bossa Nova
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:11
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Bola De Meia, Bola De Gude (Sock Ball and Marbles)
(4:12)  2. Who Is in Love Here (a Noite)
(4:26)  3. Abre Alas (Open the Way)
(4:35)  4. Tristesse
(4:33)  5. Beleza E Canção (Beauty And Song)
(4:21)  6. Anima
(3:53)  7. Soberana Rosa (She Walks This Earth)
(4:26)  8. Doce Presença (Sweetest Presence)
(5:37)  9. Tarde (Evening)
(4:50) 10. Tres Pontas (Tres Pontas Town)
(4:23) 11. Velas Içadas (Hoisted Sails)
(4:42) 12. Estrela Guia (Oh, Shining Star)

Brazilian vocalist Carol Saboya's previous recording with her father, pianist Antonio Adolfo La e Ca: Here and There (AAM Music) was one of the highlights of 2010. She returns as headliner on Belezas: The Music of Ivan Lins and Milton Nascimento again, supported by Adolfo and his very fine quartet. Composers Lins and Nascimento represent a late '60s answer to bossa nova, which had dominated Brazilian (and a good bit of American jazz) in the late 1950s and early '60s. Called MPB (Musica Popular Brasileira), this music was less a musical genre and more a combination of original songwriting and updated folk themes. 

The twelve-song recital is sung in Portuguese and English with splendid musical direction by Adolfo and accompaniment by guitarist Claudio Spiewak, whose clean lines and elastic chording properly dress up- tempo pieces like "Tres Pontas" and ballads like "Doce Presenca," which features the excellent Hendrik Meurkens working his Latin harmonica magic. Providng soprano ("Tristesse") and tenor saxophone ("Tarde"), Dave Liebman proves a master of musical barometric pressure, manipulating a song's humidity to effect just the proper sensuousness to complement Saboya's well-balanced soprano.

In what seems an endless flood of Latin jazz, excellence always finds its way and is properly manifested in Saboya and Adolfo. The pair's specific choice of such a narrow wedge of Brazilian music tightens the focus of the disc, making it intelligent and aesthetic entertainment. There is much to be learned and enjoyed about Belezas: The Music of Ivan Lins and Milton Nascimento, and we are lucky to have it to enjoy. 
~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/belezas-the-music-of-ivan-lins-and-milton-nascimento-carol-saboya-aam-music-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php
 
Personnel: Antonio Adolfo: piano; Claudio Spiewak: acoustic and electric guitars; Jorge Helder: double bass; Rafael Barata: drums and percussion; Dave Liebman: soprano and tenor saxophones (4, 9); Hendrik Meurkens: harmonica (8).

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