Showing posts with label Chiara Civello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chiara Civello. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Chiara Civello - Canzoni

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:44
Size: 160,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Via con me
(3:34)  2. Io che non vivo senza te
(4:25)  3. Con una rosa
(4:29)  4. Che me importa el mundo
(5:22)  5. Va bene va bene così
(4:26)  6. Io che amo solo te
(4:04)  7. Never Never Never
(4:13)  8. Metti una sera a cena
(3:27)  9. Una sigaretta
(3:52) 10. Fortissimo
(4:17) 11. Incantevole
(4:01) 12. E penso a te
(4:18) 13. Il Mondo
(3:31) 14. Senza fine
(4:28) 15. I mulini dei ricordi
(4:08) 16. Mentre tutto scorre
(3:18) 17. Arrivederci

Originally from Rome but now based in New York City, Italian singer/songwriter Chiara Civello is an eclectic, far-reaching artist who brings a variety of pop, jazz, cabaret and Latin influences to the table. Although Civello has performed straight-ahead jazz in the past, she is not a full-time jazz singer or a bebop purist by any means; stylistically, much of the material she has recorded for Verve is closer to Sade, Basia, Norah Jones, Nellie McKay (minus the eccentricity and sharp-tongued humor) or Rickie Lee Jones than it is to hardcore jazz vocalists like Abbey Lincoln, Sheila Jordan and Kitty Margolis. But the jazz influence is almost always present in Civello's pop recordings and since her arrival in the United States, she has crossed paths with major jazz musicians like alto saxophonist Phil Woods and guitarist Mike Stern. Listing all of Civello's influences could be time-consuming; Civello gives the impression that along the way, she has listened to everyone from Joni Mitchell, Sade and Sting to Ella Fitzgerald, Julie London and Billie Holiday. Brazilian jazz and pop is also a strong influence on Civello, who is obviously well aware of Brazilian greats such as Astrud Gilberto, Gal Costa, Ivan Lins and Antonio Carlos Jobim. Although Civello grew up in a country where Italian is the primary language, much of her writing has been in English. Civello, in fact, has been singing and writing in at least four languages English, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish and when she performs in English, Civello sings with only a slight trace of an Italian accent. Her command of the English language is excellent, and her accent is beneficial in that it gives her performances a great deal of character.

Civello was still living in Italy when, at the age of 17, she was hired to perform as a featured vocalist for the Mario Raja Big Bang (as opposed to Mario Raja Big Band). After that, she was employed by Italian jazz drummer Roberto Gatto, who is well-known in Italy and included her in his group the Noisemakers. In 1993, Civello moved to Boston after being awarded a scholarship to the prestigious Berklee College of Music and by the time she graduated from Berklee in 1998, Civello had received a Boston Jazz Society Award as well as a Cleo Laine Award. In 2000, she left Boston for New York City, where she met veteran producer Russ Titelman, who has worked with a long list of major artists that includes, among others, Paul Simon, Rickie Lee Jones, Randy Newman, Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Gordon Lightfoot, James Taylor and Brazilian star Milton Nascimento. Titelman went on to produce a demo for Civello and introduced her to Ron Goldstein, president and CEO of the Verve Music Group, and Goldstein ended up offering her a contract. Titelman also introduced Civello to veteran pop composer Burt Bacharach, with whom she co-wrote the song "Trouble." Late Quarter Moon, Civello's first album for Verve, was given a February 2005 release date in the United States. https://itunes.apple.com/br/artist/chiara-civello/id41621668

Canzoni

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Chiara Civello - Eclipse

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:46
Size: 137,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:11)  1. Come Vanno Le Cose
(3:18)  2. Eclisse Twist
(4:25)  3. Cuore In Tasca
(6:35)  4. Qualcuno Come Te
(3:08)  5. Sambarilove feat.Roubinho Jacobina
(4:01)  6. Parole Parole
(3:07)  7. Amore, Amore, Amore
(4:12)  8. La Giusta Distanza
(3:58)  9. Um Dia
(3:26) 10. New York City Boy
(3:02) 11. To Be Wild
(3:18) 12. Quello Che Conta

Three years after the last album, Songs, Chiara Civello is about to return to the record market with a new album called Eclipse coming out in March, but not just ... as of May The artist will return to tour to present live new songs. The new album will be released with Sony Music Italia release on March 31 and will be presented live with four special appointments in some prestigious Italian locations, which will be added to new appointments in the coming months.  Chiara Civello began her record career in 2005 with the album Last quarter moon , the first album of an Italian artist to be engraved with the prestigious label Verve Records . In 2012 he follows The Place of the World , a record containing the same song with which Chiara Civello participates in the Sanremo Festival . During his career, Civello has composed with Burt Bacharach , collaborating with the star of Brazilian pop Ana Carolina and winning the Multishow Award for Best Song in Brazil  Eclipse is the sixth studio record of the singer. http://www.allmusicitalia.it/news/chiara-civello-eclipse.html  (translate by google)

Eclipse

Monday, March 26, 2018

Chiara Civello - The Space Between

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:19
Size: 106.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. Night
[4:07] 2. If You Ever Think Of Me
[3:29] 3. Un Passo Dopo L'altro
[3:16] 4. My Broken Heart
[3:49] 5. Mr. Tru Love
[3:03] 6. Without Him
[5:12] 7. Isola
[4:31] 8. Seagulls
[3:17] 9. Don't Ask Me Why
[2:42] 10. L Train
[4:28] 11. Skylark
[3:35] 12. Born To Sail Away
[1:52] 13. Your Home

Originally from Rome but now based in New York City, Italian singer/songwriter Chiara Civello is an eclectic, far-reaching artist who brings a variety of pop, jazz, cabaret and Latin influences to the table. Although Civello has performed straight-ahead jazz in the past, she is not a full-time jazz singer or a bebop purist by any means; stylistically, much of the material she has recorded for Verve is closer to Sade, Basia, Norah Jones, Nellie McKay (minus the eccentricity and sharp-tongued humor) or Rickie Lee Jones than it is to hardcore jazz vocalists like Abbey Lincoln, Sheila Jordan and Kitty Margolis. But the jazz influence is almost always present in Civello's pop recordings -- and since her arrival in the United States, she has crossed paths with major jazz musicians like alto saxophonist Phil Woods and guitarist Mike Stern. Listing all of Civello's influences could be time-consuming; Civello gives the impression that along the way, she has listened to everyone from Joni Mitchell, Sade and Sting to Ella Fitzgerald, Julie London and Billie Holiday. Brazilian jazz and pop is also a strong influence on Civello, who is obviously well aware of Brazilian greats such as Astrud Gilberto, Gal Costa, Ivan Lins and Antonio Carlos Jobim. Although Civello grew up in a country where Italian is the primary language, much of her writing has been in English. Civello, in fact, has been singing and writing in at least four languages -- English, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish -- and when she performs in English, Civello sings with only a slight trace of an Italian accent. Her command of the English language is excellent, and her accent is beneficial in that it gives her performances a great deal of character. ~Alex Henderson

The Space Between mc
The Space Between zippy

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Chiara Civello - Last Quarter Moon

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:24
Size: 111,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Here Is Everything
(4:23)  2. The Wrong Goodbye
(5:33)  3. Ora
(3:05)  4. Caramel
(6:26)  5. Parole Incerte
(4:13)  6. Last Quarter Moon
(4:19)  7. Nature Song
(3:04)  8. In Questi Giorni
(1:37)  9. Sambaroma
(4:15) 10. Trouble
(3:48) 11. Outono
(2:37) 12. I Won't Run Away

While she's a fresh and exotic voice on the recording scene, the multi-talented, Italian-born, internationally minded singer and musician has been keeping great company. With a vocal range and style that quickly bring Dianne Reeves to mind, she's recorded with Tony Bennett and James Taylor; so impressed Burt Bacharach that he collaborated here on the lush, emotional ballad "Trouble"; snagged legendary rock producer Russ Titelman to helm the recording; and is roundly adored by no less than '80s pop queen Cyndi Lauper, who crowed, "This record is haunting and she's just fantastic...her voice just captivates you." What Cyndi says. Civello's not quite as crisp vocally as Lizz Wright, but her jazz-soul heart is in the same place while traversing many borders singing in English, Italian, and Portuguese. While gently swinging numbers like the Brazilian-flavored, hypnotic "Ora" are more compelling, slower and smokier tunes like "Parole Incerte" offer her deepest modes of expression. Her skills as a songwriter are firmly on display, but she chooses a few interesting, somewhat obscure covers in samba-flavored cuts like Suzanne Vega's graceful "Caramel" and Rosa Passos/Fernando DeOliveira's "Outono." That sort of globe-trotting will set her apart from the pack of great female singers currently dotting the jazz landscape. ~ Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/last-quarter-moon-mw0000397350

Personnel: Chiara Civello (vocals, shaker, percussion); Adam Rogers (guitar); Mark Stewart (cello); Alain Mallet (melodica, piano, Fender Rhodes piano); Miguel Zenón (alto saxophone); Larry Goldings (Hammond b-3 organ); Rob Mounsey (keyboards); Mike Mainieri (vibraphone); James Genus, Ben Street (bass instrument); Clarence Penn, Steve Gadd , Dan Rieser (drums); Jamey Haddad (percussion, bells); Alex Alvear (background vocals).

Last Quarter Moon