Showing posts with label Portugal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portugal. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Maria Anadon - A Jazzy Way

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:36
Size: 128,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:46)  1. Old Devil Moon
(4:40)  2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(3:33)  3. Confirmation
(4:12)  4. Comes Love
(6:15)  5. My One And Only Love
(4:21)  6. Stolen Moments
(3:35)  7. Black Coffee
(2:50)  8. Devil May Care
(3:50)  9. Wouldn't It Be Loverly?
(4:53) 10. You Don't Know What Love Is
(2:56) 11. I'm Old Fashioned
(5:09) 12. Tenderly
(4:03) 13. The Best Is Yet to Come
(1:28) 14. One Note Samba

Portuguese singer Maria Anadon's refreshing take on the Great American Songbook gives each of these standards new life after decades of countless recorded versions in more traditional settings. Her percussive scatting and rich alto voice highlight "Old Devil Moon," while Anat Cohen's playful clarinet decorates Anadon's dramatic "Comes Love." The brisk setting of Oliver Nelson's "Stolen Moments" recasts this timeless early-'60s blues into a new light, also featuring a potent Cohen tenor sax solo. If Anadon has one handicap, it is her occasional difficulty clearly enunciating English lyrics in up-tempo numbers like "Confirmation" and the awkward handling of "Wouldn't It Be Loverly?" where she seems to be trying to correct its title. 

The rhythm section is outstanding, anchored by veteran drummer and jazz educator Sherrie Maricle (longtime leader of Diva), bassist Noriko Ueda, and pianist Tomoko Ohno. Maria Anadon has made a major statement with her debut recording for the North American jazz audience. 
~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-jazzy-way-mw0000461975

Personnel: Maria Anadon (vocals); Anat Cohen (clarinet, saxophone, tenor saxophone); Noriko Ueda (bass instrument); Tomoko Ohno (piano); Sherrie Maricle (drums).

Monday, February 28, 2022

Julio Resende - Fado & Further (Live)

Size: 171,4 MB
Time: 74:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Piano Jazz, Fado, Latin Jazz
Art: Front

01. Uma Outra Mariquinhas ( 9:18)
02. Fado Loucura/Sou Do Fado (10:45)
03. Da Alma (11:46)
04. Gaivota ( 8:35)
05. Lagrima (Feat. Silvia Perez Cruz) ( 6:55)
06. Cucurrucucu Paloma (Feat. Silvia Perez Cruz) ( 8:49)
07. Pare Meu (Feat. Silvia Perez Cruz) ( 9:52)
08. Enfrentar O Medo ( 8:17)

“Fado & Further”, consists of live excerpts from concerts performed by Júlio Resende between 2014 and 2015, while touring in support of his previous work – “Amália por Júlio Resende”, rated 5 “Choc-Disc” stars by prestigious magazine CLASSICA – FRANCE.

Being a two-parted album, the first half brings us a solo performance by the pianist, who presents new takes on the Fado songbook, alongside an original piece and a traditional hispanic song; the second part brings along the charming Sílvia Pérez Cruz – who began her collaboration with Júlio Resende in a sold-out show at the Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, in Lisbon and is considered by critics and the public “Spain’s best singer right now”.

Júlio Resende embraced the heritage of Carlos Paredes and Amália Rodrigues and from his fingertips sprang a new approach to Fado.

After having sold out venues in Dili and Tokyo, the pianist’s next destination is Paris, where he will perform at the JazzyColors Festival before returning to Portugal to present his new record.The “Fado & Further” concerts are scheduled for November 27th at the Auditório Municipal de Olhão, in Algarve and November 28th at the Grande Auditório do Centro Cultural de Belém, in Lisbon.

Along with Sílvia Pérez Cruz, Júlio Resende will also be joined on stage by the great brazilian singer-songwriter Moreno Veloso, musical heir to one of the greatest brazilian icons – his father Caetano Veloso.

Fado & Further

Saturday, September 29, 2018

Katia Guerreiro - Sempre

Size: 102,8 MB
Time: 43:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Fado
Art: Front

01. Prologo A Minha Vida E (0:47)
02. De Ti Direi Apenas (3:07)
03. Quem Diria (2:11)
04. Tristeza Velha (3:18)
05. Deixar-te Um Dia (2:30)
06. Fora De Cena (3:44)
07. Distante (3:12)
08. Na Volta (2:23)
09. Vem (Cançao Para O Joao Mario) (3:03)
10. Rezando Pedi Por Ti (3:27)
11. Aqui (2:32)
12. Dia Nao (3:11)
13. Brado (3:43)
14. Fado Pessoa (2:34)
15. Sempre (3:13)
16. Epilogo A Minha Vida E (0:40)

It’s a gift. Katia Guerreiro both heals bruised souls and tends to wounded bodies. At thirty eight, this talented Portuguese woman pursues a dual career. By day she is a specialist doctor, by night a successful fado singer. Caught between two passions, the young woman, who grew up in the Azores, has chosen not to choose. For the last 12 years, since the success of her album “Fado Maior” revealed her talents to the world, Katia Guerreiro has captured, better than anyone, the true and original essence of fado. The demanding circle of fans have even gone as far as to compare her to the incomparable Amalia Rodrigues. She has captured both the words and spirit of this great star. Each line is filled with spirituality, whispered secrets and tradition. Love stories finish in heartbreak and blues resonates with the most subtle of echoes – the echoes of the restless Fernando Pessoa and the more contemporary António Lobo Antunes, two Lisbon poets that she visited. Eyes closed and hands interlaced behind her back, Katia Guerreiro offers us a version of fado that transcends clichés, daring to open new horizons by inviting artists such as sambista Martinho Da Vila and diva Amina Alaoui. Brazilian saudade and Moroccan tarab evoke fado’s tragic destiny with long timeless blues. All this serves to highlight the singer’s talent, faultless technique and also a sensitivity that holds us on a tightrope, on the edge of the abyss, and draws us into an intimate drama that becomes universal. Soul wrenching moments make hearts and bodies tremble, as they did at her concert on the mythic stage of the Olympia in Paris on 23 January 2012 or on January 30, 2016, during a memorable concert at the Opera Grande Hall in Lyon, when she became the first Portuguese artist to sing on this stage.

Katia as a captivating and sincere ambassador has performed on the biggest stages and in various countries such as Norway, Spain, France, Brazil, and Latin America for this fall of 2018.

In March 2017, Katia Guerreiro is invited to perform at the Al Bustan Festival in Beirut. In 2017, the prestigious Lebanese festival was titled “Queens and Empresses of the East”

Main awards :
Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French Government
Ordem do Infante D. Henrique by the Portuguese Government
Mexican prize “Lunas del Auditorio”, for his concert at the Teatro de la Ciudad in October 2015.

Sempre

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Carmen Souza - Kachupada

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:55
Size: 111,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:34)  1. Manha 1 de Dezembro
(2:57)  2. Donna Lee
(4:15)  3. Luta
(5:25)  4. My Favourite Things
(3:41)  5. Ivanira
(3:55)  6. Xinxiroti
(4:09)  7. Terra Sab
(0:49)  8. Origem
(3:17)  9. 6 On Na Tarrafal
(3:48) 10. Vida Facil
(2:36) 11. Tchega
(4:20) 12. Koladjazz
(4:04) 13. Novo Dia

Lisbon-born, to a Cape Verdean family, Carmen Souza is now a London resident, but sings (in the words of David Sylvian) ‘in her native creole dialect with an intimacy, sensuality and vivacity, characterised by a tremendous lightness of touch’. She writes the lyrics, producer/bassist Theo Pas’cal the melodies, of most of the songs (in a genre described by Sylvain as ‘world soul’) on this charming album, but there are a couple of nods to the world of jazz: Charlie Parker’s frenetic bop anthem ‘Donna Lee’, and an arrestingly idiosyncratic visit to a standard, the Sound of Music’s ‘My Favourite Things’. ‘Kachupada’ refers to family and friends getting together to eat Cachupa (Cape Verdean soul food), and there is, appropriately enough, an atmosphere throughout this entirely original-sounding album of informality, joyousness and celebration, the arrangements lean but intense, driven by skilfully calibrated percussion and lithe bass playing, and occasionally tastefully augmented by accordion, flute, guitar, saxophone and flugelhorn. Souza’s voice is striking, strong but flexible, with an attractive rasp and the odd sigh or cry emphasising the songs’ sentiments; overall, this is a highly unusual mix of Cape Verdean rhythms, jazz and soul that should see her audience widen way beyond the WOMAD Festival faithful that currently form its core. http://www.londonjazznews.com/2013/02/cd-review-carmen-souza-kachupada.html

Kachupada

Monday, July 9, 2018

Carmen Souza - Creology

Styles: Vocal, Piano And Guitar
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:32
Size: 100,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:50)  1. Ligria
(3:03)  2. Senhorinha
(3:07)  3. Upa Neguinho
(3:44)  4. Pretty Eyes
(3:28)  5. Mon di Deus
(3:39)  6. Xinxiroti
(3:17)  7. Tud Tem 1 Razão
(2:50)  8. London Light
(3:44)  9. Kem Ka Tem Cabeca
(4:24) 10. Homem Musica
(4:18) 11. Escuta Moçambique
(3:03) 12. Creology

The world tour of Carmen Souza , associated with the release of her eighth album, Creology, also hit Italy on five dates between April and May . The Portuguese singer of Cape Verdean origins confirms the association with his mentor and producer, the double bass player Theo Pascal, and with the percussionist Elias Kacomanolis. In some songs we add the very young son of Pascal, Zoe.The route is particularly rich in suggestions. Equipped with a very personal pronunciation and a unique interpretative ability, Carmen Souza highlights her chromatic qualities passing from baritonal glissando to falsetto excursions (up to harmonic singing) but she does not remain a prisoner of her prodigious technique. The repertoire (mostly original: his lyrics and music by Pascal) continues to orbit in that boundary land that combines jazz, traditional Brazilian and Caribbean music and African influences but each time it is fresh and engaging. More than in other records, Creology's path unfolds in a sincere and coherent manner, bringing more attention to tradition than to moments of self-celebration or to fusions of pop flavor (the only, vaguely acid jazz is "London Light"). The interpretations of the Souza highlight greater balance but continue to strike for the eccentricity of the diction, the evocativeness of the sounds, the expressive tension and the variety of solutions: his is among the most intense voices in the contemporary scene, beyond genres and labels. Its partners provide it with a colorful, highly effective and appropriate rhythmic fabric. The three non-original songs are "Upa Neguinho," tribute to Brazil by Edu Lobo, "Pretty Eyes" and "Homem Musica" of the Portuguese / Mozambican Orlanda Guilande. Translate by Google ~ Angelo Leonardi https://www.allaboutjazz.com/creology-review-by-angelo-leonardi.php

Personnel: Carmen Souza: voice, piano, guitar; Theo Pascal: bass, percussions, voice; Elias Kacomanolis: drums, percussions, voice; guest: Zoe Pascal: drums, percussions.

Creology

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Mariza - Mariza

Size: 125,4 MB
Time: 53:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018-05-25
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

01. Trigueirinha (2:39)
02. Quem Me Dera (4:16)
03. Amor Perfeito (3:41)
04. Oraçao (3:13)
05. Sou (Rochedo) (3:30)
06. E Mentira (2:57)
07. Semente Viva (Feat. Jaques Morelenbaum) (3:40)
08. Por Tanto Te Amar (4:20)
09. Nosso Tempo (4:39)
10. Verde Limao (3:06)
11. Quebranto (4:14)
12. Oi Nha Mae (3:56)
13. Fado Errado (Feat. Maria Da Fe) (3:25)
14. Fado Refugio (3:04)
15. Trigueirinha (Feat. Carolina Deslandes, Jorge Palma, Mafalda Veiga, Marisa Liz, Ricardo Ribeiro & Tim) (2:37)

In less than twelve years, Mariza has risen from a well hidden local phenomenon, known only to a small circle of admirers in Lisbon, to one of the most widely acclaimed stars of the World Music circuit.

No Portuguese artist since Amália Rodrigues has experienced such a triumphant international career, accumulating success after success on the most prestigious world stages, raving reviews from the most demanding music critics worldwide and countless international awards and distinctions. As usual, her musical partners are simply only the best: Jacques Morelenbaum and John Mauceri, José Merced and Miguel Poveda, Gilberto Gil and Ivan Lins, Lenny Kravitz and Sting, Cesária Évora and Tito Paris, Carlos do Carmo and Rui Veloso. An her repertoire, while firmly rooted in classical and contemporary Fado, has grown to include occasional Cape Verdean mornas, Rhythm and Blues classics or any other themes she holds dear to her heart.

In the past twelve years, Mariza has long passed the stage of a mere exotic episode in the World Music scene, ready to be replaced by whatever new colourful phenomenon appears in another geographic corner of the recording industry’s market. She proved to be a major international artist, strongly original and immensely gifted, from whom much is yet to be expected in the future. The young girl from Mozambique, raised in the popular Lisbon neighbourhood of Mouraria, has mastered the roots of her musical culture and developed into an universal artist who is able to open herself to the world without ever losing her heartfelt sense of Portuguese identity. And Portuguese audiences are the first to acknowledge this triumph and pay her back with unlimited love and gratitude. ~Rui Vieira Nery

Mariza

Friday, April 20, 2018

Sara Serpa - Close Up

Size: 100,4 MB
Time: 41:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Object (4:01)
02. Passaros (4:16)
03. Sol Enganador (5:59)
04. The Future (5:37)
05. Listening (2:55)
06. Storm Coming (5:18)
07. Woman (4:03)
08. Quiet Riot (3:55)
09. Cantar Ao Fim (4:57)

Personnel - Sara Serpa: vocals; Ingrid Laubrock: tenor and soprano saxophone; Erik Friedlander: cello.

The incomparable Portuguese vocalist/composer Sara Serpa remains faithful to her own musical signature, receiving universal acclaim with recent projects such as Sara Serpa’s Recognition (with harpist Zeena Parkins and saxophonist Mark Turner), Serpa/Matos duo, and now this fantastic new trio, whose first album, Close Up, is the subject of this review. Whether creating textural consonance or embarking on precise contrapuntal effects, the work of German-born saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and American cellist Erik Friedlander coexists beautifully and pacifically with Serpa’s flawless phrasing and multi-sensitive tone.

Like in some past works, this album includes many references to literature, a deep-rooted passion now extended to film, with Abbas Kiarostami’s 1990 masterpiece Close-Up surfacing as an extra inspiration.

“Object” shows the threesome dancing in different ways, using distinct cadences yet perfectly integrated as a group. Brief cello slashes provide a thin tapestry for both Serpa’s lyrical buoyancy and Laubrock’s world music-inspired inflections on the soprano. The vocalist perambulates since the moment that sax and cello agree on standing side-by-side, anticipating a grand finale delivered in unison.

“Quiet Riot” is clearly hooked on Serpa’s style. Elegant parallel motions and counterpoints, phrase complementations, and Laubrock’s soprano knottiness over the groovy bends and swift drives imposed by Friedlander. These bright moments make you want to go back and re-listen to them again.

Exhibiting multiple ostinatos and the words of the Portuguese poet Ruy Bello, “Pássaros”, is a furtive chamber-jazz effort with a well-defined identity. Still, it couldn't match the irresistible enunciation of “The Future”, a poignant, unswerving song awaken by a continuously reiterated sax-vox pointillism and cello wails. Inspired by Virginia Woolf, the song merges light and darkness in genial moments of metrical defiance. This is naked music where the words mean highly focused sounds.

Friedlander’s seductive fingerstyle drives “Sol Enganador”, a meditative cinematic odyssey where Godard’s philosophical freedom gets in touch with a Fellini-esque flamboyance. Laubrock’s air blows, percussive and invasive at the same time, end up falling into short, feverish phrases that contrast with Serpa’s syllabic patterns, sparsely laid down with an infallible precision.

Floating like a breezy folk song, “Woman” was devised with a sort of angelic flair and erudite expressiveness, meaning that the spirit of Luce Irigaray, who inspired the composition, was properly captured and relocated into the music.

The album closes with “Cantar Ao Fim”, a spellbinding piece with a strong connection to nature, whose freedom erupts from all the pores of its smooth skin. The natural, impromptu vocal chant that inaugurates this piece is followed by a blossoming groove that pushes us into a rapturous sonic orb.

Composition-wise, Serpa is ahead of the curve, establishing her ideas with one foot on the avant-garde and the other on the new music. Categorization can be a difficult task, but what’s really relevant here is that Close Up guarantees an arresting affirmation of her artistic maturity. ~JazzTrail

Close Up

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Julio Resende - Amalia Por Julio Resende

Size: 130,2 MB
Time: 56:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

01. Fado Portugues (4:30)
02. Vou Dar De Beber A Dor - A Casa Da Mariquinhas (4:30)
03. Tudo Isto E Fado (7:45)
04. Foi Deus (4:35)
05. Estranha Forma De Vida (4:51)
06. Uma Casa Portuguesa (3:55)
07. Barco Negro (6:34)
08. Gaivota (4:33)
09. Ai Mouraria (3:27)
10. Amendoa Amarga (7:10)
11. Medo (Dueto (Im)Possivel Com Amalia Rodrigues) (4:23)

There’s only ever been one Amália, now in the National Pantheon with the honour of being Portugal’s biggest voice of the twentieth century. In 2013, 14 years after the passing of this diva of fado, pianist Júlio Resende decided to pay tribute to her in his first solo album. It’s a surprising album, just him and an acoustic piano playing classics of Lisbon song immortalised by Amália. That’s it, until the no less surprising final track, which removes the guitar accompaniment from the original recording of “Medo” (1965) to create a magical meeting of singer and pianist, a meeting which obviously never happened.

Resende went on the road with Amália and his piano, and the fado within him has flourished ever since. So much so that his latest release is Fado & Further, the live recording of his tour, including the performance of Spanish singer Silvia Pérez Cruz, performing a freestyle version of “Cucurrucucú Paloma” on stage with him at Lisbon’s Gulbenkian Auditorium. There’s even a bonus DVD which includes a conversation with author Gonçalo M. Tavares.

Amália by Júlio Resende was his first solo album but it really isn’t the debut of a musician desperate to come of age. “I’m 33, but I don’t really like saying how old I am, much less the label of promising young thing, which has been said of me several times. It happens just because people focus on the age, not the work.” It’s an understandable stance, especially given that this pianist, born in Faro, had already released three jazz albums, fronting trios and quartets (on the prestigious Portuguese Clean Feed label) before the age of 30.

The three discs were rooted in the great classics of jazz, but with unorthodox touches, and quickly got him noticed at home and abroad. In relation to Jazzatustra, the second album released in 2009, the influential All Music Guide said: “This recording is a fine example of how European jazz musicians have taken cues from their American counterparts, and have upped the ante to a point where they are the ones making fresh sounds and unique statements, while many U.S. musicians linger stubbornly on tradition. Make no mistake, Resende and his band have got it goin’ on”. With such praise, it would be easy to foresee a quiet career on the jazz circuits, but Resende wanted to gamble beyond this. “After three albums with groups, I decided I wanted to record solo. That’s when I turned back to fado, because what I really like is to say the things bubbling away within me. Well, I’d already been working with fado for six years or so, I’d already done a few duets with fado singers, and I felt I could achieve this equation of me, piano and fado. I felt it was the most personal disc I could make and along the way even imagined a duet with Amália, from whom I’d learned the fado songs thanks to her television and radio appearances.” It’s worth mentioning the beautiful music video which charts this virtual meeting, produced by Pedro Cláudio (available at youtu.be/En7gHOAjGvI).

Until Resende, fado rarely mixed with jazz. Amália and Don Byas recorded together in 1967, Carlos Paredes and Charlie Haden in 1990 and not much else. That’s why this pianist from the Algarve speaks of the challenge surrounding Amália. “In jazz, there’s a whole history of piano, but in fado there isn’t the same history. I felt very much that I was starting from nothing. Amália dives into fado, but it’s infused with improvisation. I say improvisation and not jazz because jazz has connotations of American-style music.”

Amália is fado mixed with jazz that’s not quite jazz. But what are fado and jazz to Júlio Resende? “I don’t really know how to define fado. I know it’s something very deep, connected to silence, absence, sadness – but also to the happiness of waiting for someone who might still show up. So I built on the idea that fado started during the Portuguese Discoveries, with wives were waiting for their men folk who had left, and men folk waiting to go back to them. All of the lament and all of the hope is what makes fado for me.” And jazz? “One of the nicest jazz mottos is that of freedom. Freedom to ‘not repeat, do it differently.’ I feel like a vacant musician, wanting to construct an identity, as long as the identity isn’t always the same.”

Resende chose Amállia for her voice and charisma, but also for her repertoire – and all that represents in terms of national identity.”It was through her that we learned these songs, the songs we have in our memories. My idea was to take apparently worn-out songs and show that this tiredness is only a matter of how we see them. If you look very carefully at someone you’ve lived with for a long time, you can always (re)discover that special something that she has.”

Even if most Portuguese people grew up singing Amália, the same isn’t true abroad, which is why going international is another challenge. “I wanted to see the reaction of a public that don’t know these songs. From the concerts in Germany, I realised there could be a spontaneous reaction, even when the public don’t know the words, or have never heard them before. What happened was the discs I took with me sold so quickly at the first of the German concerts that I had to keep some back to sell at the second.” Like Amália, Resende believes the best thing in the world is giving and receiving. “I don’t find much fun in travel for travel’s sake – I’d rather discover a place, find inspiration there and then give something back in return. I particularly like travelling to play.”

Amalia Por Julio Resende

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Kurt Rosenwinkel & OJM - Our Secret World

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:58
Size: 151.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Big band
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 6:32] 1. Our Secret World
[ 9:15] 2. The Cloister
[ 8:45] 3. Zhivago
[11:33] 4. Dream Of The Old
[ 6:37] 5. Turns
[10:08] 6. Use Of Light
[13:04] 7. Path Of The Heart

Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar; João Mortágua: alto saxophone (1, 5, 7), soprano saxophone (5, 7); João Pedro Brandão: alto saxophone (1, 3-6), clarinet (1, 3), soprano saxophone (2), flute (4, 5, 7); Mário Santos: tenor saxophone (1-6), clarinet (2-4); José Pedro Coelho: tenor saxophone, flute (1); Rui Teixeira: baritone saxophone (1-3, 5), bass clarinet (3, 4, 6, 7); Nick Marchione: trumpet; Erick Poirrier: trumpet;Susana Santos Silva: trumpet (1, 3-6), flugelhorn (2, 7); Rogério Ribeiro: trumpet (1, 2, 6, 7); Michaël Joussein: trombone; Álvaro Pinto: trombone; Daniel Dias: trombone; Gonçalo Dias: trombone; Abe Rábade: piano (1-5) Demian Cabaud: double-bass (1-7); Marcos Cavaleiro: drums (1-7); Carlos Azevedo: arranger (1, 3-5), conductor (1, 3-5), piano (6, 7); José Luis Rego: alto saxophone (2), soprano saxophone (3, 6), clarinet (7); Pedro Guedes: arranger (6), conductor (2, 6, 7); Ohad Talmor: arranger (2, 7); José Silva: trumpet (3-5); Nuno Pinto: clarinet (4).

With the creative possibilities offered by its expanded palette, it's no surprise that so many artists who traditionally work in the context of more pliant, small ensembles turn to larger settings at least once in their career. For those already predisposed to greater compositional complexity, the intrinsic challenges are many; but so, too, are the ultimate rewards. It's no surprise, then, that Kurt Rosenwinkel—perhaps his generation's most influential guitarist, spawning almost as many imitators as Pat Metheny (himself, an early influence on Rosenwinkel)—has been collaborating with big bands in Europe for the last several years. What is surprising, however, is that Rosenwinkel has waited until 2010 to release an album featuring big band arrangements of some of his best writing. With a result as fine as Our Secret World, however, it's unlikely that many of the guitarist's large fan base would argue it's been anything but well worth the wait.

Following the slight sidestep of Rosenwinkel's Reflections (Wommusic, 2009)—a simmering album of mostly jazz standards, recorded with an empathetic trio that demonstrated just how much the guitarist's interpretive skills have grown since his early, similarly cover-heavy live album, East Coast Love Affair (Fresh Sound New Talent, 1997)—Rosenwinkel returns to a set of entirely original compositions. There's nothing actually new to be found, however, as the guitarist delves back to the lengthy, episodic "Dream of the Old," first heard on The Enemies of Energy (Verve, 2000) and forward to the equally colorful but more inherently effervescent "The Cloister," from Deep Song (Verve, 2005), an all-star session that also featured pianist Brad Mehldau and saxophonist Joshua Redman.

This time, however, Rosenwinkel eschews star-power for the built-in chemistry of Orquestra Jazz de Matosinhos (OJM), a near-15 year-old Portuguese ensemble that approached the guitarist with the idea of collaborating in 2007. That all but one chart ("Dream of the Old") was scored by OJM's Carlos Azevedo, Pedro Guedes or guest arranger Ohad Talmor without the guitarist's involvement, speaks to their surprisingly deep understanding of some of his most difficult compositions, and to the entire 16-piece ensemble's ability to traverse music that, at times, hints harmonically at Joe Zawinul and the orchestral expansiveness of Vince Mendoza, but ultimately sounds like nothing but Rosenwinkel.

Simply stunning throughout the disc, Rosenwinkel solos with particularly breathtaking vertical and horizontal movement on "The Cloister," while turning more lyrical on the balladic "Use of Light," one of three tunes culled from The Next Step (Verve, 2000), still considered by most to be a particular watershed in a discography that's nothing but high points. Rosenwinkel's ethereal mélange of heavily overdriven and harmonized guitar with his falsetto voice—blended so seamlessly as to create a singular whole—has never sounded so distinctive, despite an increasing number of guitarists constantly trying to copy his unique approach to sound, melody and harmony. A staple of Rosenwinkel's live performances for many years, "Turns" makes its first appearance on record here, its complex combination of rich timbres, knotty counterpoint and effortless, Afro-centric polyrhythms vividly contextualizing and recontextualizing Rosenwinkel's solo—a near-relentless push-and-pull of ascending and cascading linearity.

As much as Our Secret World represents some of his finest playing to date—eclipsing, even, his seemingly unmatchable invention on the double- disc The Remedy: Live at the Village Vanguard (Wommusic, 2008)—it's as much a reflection of Rosenwinkel's remarkable acumen as a writer, with an emergent compositional voice as early as The Enemies of Energy, only his third album as a leader, and the first to focus exclusively on original material. Amidst seven stunning arrangements, Azevedo's powerful rework of the groove-driven title track—originally on Rosenwinkel's "electronica" album, Heartcore (Verve, 2003)—turns it into something more organic, encouraging a solo from Rosenwinkel that, the first of the disc, sets the bar so high that it's hard to believe he actually manages to match and raise it even further throughout the rest of the 66-minute set.

With the brighter sonics of a brass and horn section, it's often easy for a big band album to hit visceral highs out of reach of smaller ensemble discs. But the excitement of Our Secret World—coupled with beauty that often reveals itself at the most unexpected moments—has nothing to do with the obvious, and everything to do with the perfect combination of compellingly unique source material; arrangers who dig, with perfect instinct and careful consideration, into the spirit and essence of the music to turn out charts of even greater complexity and depth; and a clearly talented ensemble, capable of navigating the scores with ease and an equally ideal mix of power and understatement. As undeniably fine as OJM is, however, it's hard to deny the real star of Our Secret World: Rosenwinkel. He is at the top of a game on the ascendancy with each successive album, and his gradually growing repertoire speaks of tremendous import and a continually evolving concept of sound, harmony and improvisation that's as personal, inimitable and, indeed, secret a world as it is inspirational and appealing to the guitarist's growing legion of fans—and aspiring musicians who continue searching for points of entry. ~John Kelman

Our Secret World mc
Our Secret World zippy

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Carlos Do Carmo - Carlos Do Carmo & Bernardo Sassetti

Size: 111,5 MB
Time: 48:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Chanson, Contemporary Jazz, Fado, Folk
Art: Front

01. Retrato (3:24)
02. Cantigas Do Maio (4:45)
03. Lisboa Que Amanhece (6:02)
04. Gracias A La Vida (4:40)
05. Porto Sentido (6:02)
06. O Sol (5:23)
07. Foi Por Ela (4:17)
08. Avec Le Temps (4:58)
09. Quand On N'a Que L'amour (4:50)
10. Talvez Por Acaso (3:53)

Personnel:
Carlos Do Carmo: Vocals
Bernardo Sassetti: Piano

It's not an album of fado? It's not a jazz album? It's a fusion between the musical personalities of Carlos do Carmo and Bernardo Sassetti. A single line between the classic repertoire of Portuguese music and the timeless themes of the international repertoire.

This is an album with no secrets, at least as far as Carlos Do Carmo's voice (which comes up pure, without trapezoids, with no processing) is concerned. But it was a challenge because he was in danger of some monotony. And if this challenge is overcome with distinction and class, it is due to Bernardo Sassetti's superb and powerful performance: the pianist never puts himself above the voice, knows how to give him space and dynamic breathing and then at the moments when he assumes greater harmonic strength is brilliant, exemplary.

Then both musicians give themselves to the neighbor by welcoming him in return. Sassetti embraces a popular sense, while being exuberant and Carlos Do Carmo receives from the pianist a new adventure, which embraces as a young man, maintaining all its sophistication. It is a dialogue, which becomes touching, of mutual admiration this album, and also of admiration to the great authors of Portuguese music - these versions seem to me more passionate, those of Jacques Brel, "Quand On N'a Que L'Amour ", Léo Ferré," Avec Le Temps "and Violeta Parra," Gracias La Vida ", are emotionally more distant, but perhaps this is also a response of a lover of Portuguese music. A work that evokes a revival of Portuguese music in a erudite sense, maintaining the most important sensitivity of all: the proximity to the public. (From Portuguese)

Carlos Do Carmo & Bernardo Sassetti

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Raquel Tavares - Roberto Carlos Por Raquel Tavares

Size: 128,1 MB
Time: 54:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Fado Pop, Fado Canção
Art: Front & Back

01. Voce (2:56)
02. Como E Grande O Meu Amor Por Voce (3:48)
03. Sua Estupidez (4:13)
04. De Tanto Amor (Feat. Ana Carolina) (3:13)
05. A Distancia (3:55)
06. Debaixo Dos Caracois Dos Seus Cabelos (Feat. Caetano Veloso) (4:21)
07. Palavras (3:09)
08. Fera Ferida (5:12)
09. Detalhes (5:01)
10. Cavalgada (3:48)
11. Nao Se Esqueça De Mim (3:44)
12. Olha (3:22)
13. Do Fundo Do Meu Coraçao (4:02)
14. Emoçoes (3:46)

"Roberto Carlos By Raquel Tavares" is based on the repertoire of one of the greatest artists in the world, Roberto Carlos, and features contributions by Caetano Veloso in "Debaixo Dos Caracois Dos Seus Cabelos" and Ana Carolina in "De Tanto Amor". The project received the gold certificate in Portugal, where it stayed for several weeks in the first place among the best-selling albums.

Raquel Tavares is a Portuguese fado singer. Its name gained notoriety in Portugal for the first time in 1997, year in which, at age 12, it won in the Great Night of the Fado. In 2006 she released her first album "Raquel Tavares" and in the same year she received the Amália Rodrigues Award for 'Revelação Feminina', from the Amália Rodrigues Foundation. In 2007, Casa da Imprensa awarded him the 'Revelation Prize' of the year. With the success and subsequent releases, Raquel has performed in several countries like Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Marocco, Germany, Belgium, Holand, Scotland, England, Ireland, Uruguai, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China and recently, Australia.

Roberto Carlos Por Raquel Tavares

VA - JazzInFado

Size: 100,5 MB
Time: 39:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Latin Jazz, Fado, Fusion
Art: Front

01 Carlos Do Carmo - Lisboa Menina E Moça (4:57)
02 Helder Moutinho - Estranha Forma De Vida (3:59)
03 Carminho - Escrevi Teu Nome No Vento (4:30)
04 Antonio Zambujo - Veio A Saudade (3:55)
05 Raquel Tavares - Limao (4:17)
06 Marco Rodrigues - Solidao (3:47)
07 Ana Bacalhau - Fado Portugues De Nos (3:13)
08 Cuca Roseta - Coimbra (3:23)
09 Maria Berasarte - A Nadie Se Lo Confieso (3:26)
10 Joana Almeida - Tudo Isto E Fado (4:16)

The best fado songs, their best performers and some of the most important musicians in Latin jazz today are joining an innovative album, "JazzInFado". This album seeks to widen the frontiers of fado, bringing together great fado singers, including Carlos do Carmo, Hélder Moutinho, Carminho, António Zambujo, Raquel Tavares, Marco Rodrigues, Ana Bacalhau, Cuca Rosetta, Maria Berasarte and Joana Almeida, who interpret emblematic themes of history of fado allied to the harmonies of Latin jazz.

"JazzInFado" celebrate the six years since the fado was raised to Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO.

The idea of joining these fado greats to jazz harmonies came from Óscar Gomez, a Cuban musician and producer, currently living in Spain, a five-time Grammy winner, a member of the Board of the Latin Grammy Academy and whose productions have sold more than 20 million records worldwide.

"I always liked being a transgressor and a rebel," says the producer. "What we did was to bring fado to jazz and harmoniously enrich it [...] and enter rhythms of the Caribbean, Flemish, Brazilian, bossa nova and tango. Enter the rhythms worked in Latin jazz and enrich the harmonies a little, always respecting, obviously, the melodies and the lyrics ".

"JazzInFado" was recorded between Madrid and Lisbon and on the recordings the fadistas were accompanied by mostly Cuban musicians, as is the case of Pepe Rivero or Ivan "Melon" Lewis.

"JazzInFado" is a unique object that highlights the immense richness of fado, but showing how this music also dialogues in an innovative way with jazz.

JazzInFado

Friday, January 5, 2018

Camane - Canta Marceneiro

Size: 146,7 MB
Time: 63:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Traditional Fado, World
Art: Front & Back

01. Cabare (2:48)
02. Quadras Soltas (3:23)
03. Bebado Pintor (5:35)
04. Olhos Fatais (4:40)
05. Senhora Do Monte (4:11)
06. Ironia (3:08)
07. O Louco (4:10)
08. A Lucinda Camareira (With Carlos Do Carmo) (4:44)
09. Mocita Dos Caracois (4:11)
10. Empate Dois A Dois (3:19)
11. O Remorso (5:58)
12. Despedida (5:09)
13. A Casa Da Mariquinhas (4:02)
14. Lembro-me De Ti (4:53)
15. O Pagem (3:11)

Personnel:
José Manuel Neto - Guitarra Portuguesa
Carlos Manuel Proença - Viola
Paulo Paz - Contrabaixo

Camané (born in Oeiras, 20 December 1966) as Carlos Manuel Moutinho Paiva dos Santos Duarte, is a male vocalist, and a forerunner of the new generation of fado male singers. "The greatest fadista since Amália Rodrigues and Maria da Fé," is how British biographer David Bret, describes him.

He started gaining recognition in Portugal in 1979 after winning the 'Grande Noite do Fado' (Great Fado Night). After this first step, he continued to consistently work toward commercial success with critically well-received albums and a concert tour that touched upon both large and small venues, including 'Casas de Fado' (fado clubs) in Lisbon. He toured outside Portugal to sold-out audiences throughout his European tour.

He has released six million-selling albums: Uma Noite de Fados (1995), Na Linha da Vida (1998) marking the beginning of three records produced by José Mário Branco, Esta Coisa da Alma (2000), Pelo Dia Dentro (2001), Como sempre... Como dantes (live in 2003), and Sempre De Mim (2008). These have been released in several European and Asian countries. He has been distinguished with several awards for his voice and talent.

Canta Marceneiro

Sunday, December 31, 2017

Maria João & Mário Laginha - Chocolate

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:37
Size: 125,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:49)  1. I Have a Heart Just Like Yours
( 4:28)  2. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
( 5:00)  3. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face
(11:47)  4. Sweet Suite
( 7:54)  5. This Time
( 3:39)  6. Modern Mode / I'm Old Fashioned
( 6:42)  7. If You Could See Me Now
( 6:37)  8. Mati Mati
( 2:37)  9. When You Wish Upon A Star

Maria João (born Maria João Monteiro Grancha June 27, 1956, Lisbon, Portugal) is a Portuguese jazz singer. She is known for her vocal flexibility and improvisational skills. Although considered a jazz singer, she incorporates folk music, avant-garde, and electronica. Her main musical partner is Portuguese pianist Mário Laginha. She has also worked with Aki Takase, Bobby McFerrin, David Linx, Dino Saluzzi, Gilberto Gil, Joe Zawinul, Kai Eckhardt, Lenine, Manu Katche, Ralph Towner, Trilok Gurtu, Wolfgang Muthspiel, and OGRE. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Jo%C3%A3o

Chocolate

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Carminho - Carminho Canta Tom Jobim

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:29
Size: 104.1 MB
Styles: Fado
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. A Felicidade
[2:59] 2. O Que Tinha De Ser
[4:03] 3. Estrada Do Sol (Feat.Marisa Monte)
[3:10] 4. Meditação
[2:39] 5. Luiza
[3:32] 6. Falando De Amor (Feat.Chico Buarque)
[3:10] 7. Wave
[3:39] 8. Sabiá
[3:18] 9. O Grande Amor
[2:46] 10. Retrato Em Branco E Preto
[3:24] 11. Inútil Paisagem
[2:58] 12. Triste
[3:19] 13. Modinha (Feat.Maria Bethânia)
[2:30] 14. Don't Ever Go Away

Wise is the traveler who dives into another culture without losing her own identity, who enables both visitor and host to see themselves in a new light. So it is that Carminho, a pre-eminent star of the fado renaissance, brings her made-in-Portugal voice to songs by the late Brazilian composer Antônio Carlos Jobim, the patriarch of bossa nova. An invitation from Jobim’s family prompted "Carminho Sings Tom Jobim," the offer including accompaniment by the master’s band—guitarist Paulo Jobim (son), pianist Daniel Jobim (grandson), cellist Jaques Morelenbaum and drummer Paulo Braga. The 14 tracks also include duets with Marisa Monte, Chico Buarque and Maria Bethânia. Carminho carefully chose songs in which the musicality of opposing accents is closely matched (among other things, Brazilian Portuguese is less formal and has more open vowels than its European counterpart). The Lisbon-Rio chemistry is especially good with Monte in "Estrada do Sol" (Road to the Sun): “Give me your hand,” they sing, “Let’s go outside without thinking/About what I’ve suffered/Because our morning has made me forget.” Carminho’s fado passion soars and dances on the crests of Wave: “I know from that wave that rose in the sea/And from the stars we forgot to count/That love lets itself be surprised/While the night comes to wrap itself around us.” Her fado melancholy perfectly suits the saudade that unites the two Lusophone cultures in Sabiá (Song of the Thrush), with Jobim’s metaphors for vanished love; and she floats elegantly through O Grande Amor (Great Love), proclaiming, “There’s always a man for every woman/Always a false love you have to forget.” In music as in love, all is reciprocal: A fado singer dives into the Jobim canon, and when she emerges both are refreshed. ~Alan Tigay

Carminho Canta Tom Jobim mc
Carminho Canta Tom Jobim zippy

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Katia Guerreiro - Até Ao Fim

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:14
Size: 94.4 MB
Styles: Fado, Vocal
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:42] 1. 9 Amores
[2:36] 2. Mentiras
[4:00] 3. Até Ao Fim
[2:50] 4. Disse Ao Mar Que Te Amava
[2:13] 5. Janela Do Meu Peito
[2:45] 6. Fado Dos Contrários
[5:54] 7. Fado Da Noite Que Nos Fez
[3:58] 8. Quero Cantar Para Lua
[3:22] 9. Sei Que Estou Só
[3:24] 10. Nesta Noite
[2:21] 11. As 4 Operações
[4:03] 12. Eu Gosto Tanto De Ti-Canção Para A Mafalda

She was born in South Africa, grew up in the Azores and was discovered in Lisbon. She wanted to be a teacher, a veterinarian, and became a doctor. But fate found it. And she found Fado. Work of fate? It is her conviction that she exists and is attentive to it. So she does not make plans, she lets life happen to her. It was for this confidence that she waited for the right moment. The moment when all the elements were aligned, in the same rhythm, in the same poetry, in the same passion. She waited for the poems. She waited for the music. She waited for everyone with whom she wanted to go the long, long wished path, long prepared. The themes have been collected over the years. From inside the drawer that is her heart, they left to be sung with the emotion that characterizes it. There were many, the choice was difficult, but the 12 elected represent the new Katia Guerreiro, whom in recent years has prepared for this now. At her side, Tiago Bettencourt, "a passionate fado who besides being an excellent musician is also a friend", assured the production and musical direction of the project, but also wrote, solo and in partnership, some of the songs. Always with her, João Veiga, Pedro Castro, Luis Guerreiro and Francisco Gaspar, the musicians who have long been following his fado. To these were added other, bigger names of Portuguese music, such as Professor Joel Pina, Pedro Jóia, André Ramos, Artur Caldeira. In the authorship there are 20 names. Some in absolute debut, others in posthumous honor. All in harmony, Until the End. (Translated from Portuguese.)

Até Ao Fim mc
Até Ao Fim zippy

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Carminho - Fado

Styles: Vocal, Fado
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:06
Size: 86,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:14)  1. Escrevi Teu Nome No Vento
(2:14)  2. A Bia da Mouraria
(3:03)  3. Meu Amor Marinheiro
(1:44)  4. Palavras Dadas [Fado Rosita]
(3:14)  5. Espelho Quebrado
(2:35)  6. Marcha de Alfama
(2:38)  7. O Tejo Corre No Tejo
(3:44)  8. A Voz [Fado Licas]
(2:08)  9. Voltar a Ser
(2:32) 10. Carta a Lisboa [Fado Alexandrino Do Rocha]
(2:40) 11. Carta a Leslie Burke
(2:07) 12. Uma Vida Noutra Vida [Fado Pechincha]
(2:22) 13. Nunca e Silencio Vao [Fado Pedro Rodrigues]
(2:41) 14. Senhora da Nazare

Maria do Carmo Carvalho Rebelo de Andrade (born 20 August 1984, in Lisbon), better known as Carminho, is a Portuguese fado and popular music singer. She comes from a family of musicians, since her mother, Teresa Siqueira, was a famous fado singer. She is considered one of the most talented and innovative fado singers of her generation. She can be considered as a crossover artist, since her eclectic work shows the heritage of both traditional and contemporary fado, as she also delves into other genres such as Brazilian popular music. Carminho earned stardom status in Spain after being featured on Pablo Alborán's "Perdóname" which was a number-one single in the Spanish charts.[2][3] Carminho's albums Fado and Alma have achieved Platinum and Gold status in Portugal selling more than 50,000 copies combined. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carminho

Fado

Monday, December 11, 2017

Mariza - Live In London

Size: 173,9 MB
Time: 75:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

Personnel:
Guitar (Portuguese) – Luis Guerreiro
Acoustic Guitar – António Neto
Bass (Acoustic) – Fernando Baptista De Sousa
Piano – Tiago Machado
Trumpet – Guy Barker

The new queen of the Portuguese folk music known as fado shines in the impressive Mariza Live in London, a 2003 concert recorded at the Union Chapel in London. The twenty something Lisbon resident has been hailed as the successor to fado legend Amália Rodrigues; now, after two well-received CDs, comes Mariza's first filmed concert performance, and it is stunning.

No wonder fado has been compared to the blues: the actual musical content is different, but in terms of both origin (both come from a variety of cultures, in this case including strains of Spanish, Brazilian, and African sounds) and lyrical bent (with its constant element of saudade, roughly translated as yearning or longing, fado, like blues, is mournful, soulful music), it's every bit as deep.

Mariza is backed primarily by acoustic guitar, acoustic bass guitar, and "Portuguese guitar," a 12-string instrument that looks something like a lute and sounds a bit like a Greek bouzouki; there is some piano as well, and Guy Barker's muted trumpet provides "O Deserto" with a pronounced jazzy feel. But the singer is the main attraction here, and the power and passion of Mariza's delivery on "Barco Negro" and nearly all the others in the 16-song set, including more upbeat, celebratory numbers like "Oica La o Senhor Vinho" (the introductions are in English, but the tunes are all in Portuguese) are undeniable. Add to that Mariza's black cloak and clothing, her stylish, peroxide-blonde perm, and her highly theatrical movements and expressions, along with the darkened chapel and superb lighting, and you've got an audio-visual experience so dramatic and moving that it easily renders the language barrier irrelevant. ~Sam Graham

Live In London

Saturday, December 9, 2017

Cuca Roseta - Luz

Size: 126,0 MB
Time: 52:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

01. Luzinha (3:14)
02. Quero (3:30)
03. Foge (2:50)
04. Triste Sina (5:30)
05. Balelas (2:52)
06. Sabio Mudo (2:44)
07. Nao Demores (2:47)
08. Ate Ao Amanhecer (2:54)
09. Ai O Amor (3:33)
10. Versos Contados (2:50)
11. Luz Materna (Fado Perseguiçao) (3:33)
12. Saudade E Eu (3:11)
13. Rosinha Da Serra D'arga (2:31)
14. Contemplaçao (3:09)
15. Alecrim (4:03)
16. Luz Do Mundo (3:35)

At her 4th Album, the great new-fado singer CUCA ROSETA decides to explore her capacities has a composer and to record new fados.
A brilliant voice and one of the Portuguese greatest artists.

Bio:
And it is this absolute sincerity, bordering on dissatisfaction, which leaves us bewildered, almost shocked. This natural acceptance of fate, visible in Cuca’s dark eyes, is, also, a sign that what she says is genuine and truly felt. Moreover, she’s right.

Fortunately for us, the first step of that fate is currently being recorded in her own name: Cuca Roseta, her debut album, shows the truth within the person singing those words. Because the fado has this mystery: it allows no lying.

We will get back to that. For now, let us spend some time with Isabel “Cuca” Roseta in order to understand why – when writing about fado – such hackneyed yet indispensible words sometimes mean so much: words such as, “fate”, or “soul”, for example.

The truth is there is nothing in Cuca Roseta’s life which would foretell that the fado would, one day, choose her. There is no family history of fado performers, and the musical genre she grew up listening to was art music. Until the day, at the age of 18, she visited a fado house. The first shock, the first small onslaught to Cuca Roseta’s soul: although the fado did not yet completely seduce her, she began to need it in her life: “I went to fado houses mostly for the emotion, it was very intense”, she recalls. Without her knowing, it was already too late: she had been definitively chosen by the fado.

She began to sing, timidly. Once, a special listener recognized the truth in her voice; a truth she was beginning to express. It was Carlos Zel who insisted: “You have to learn more fados”. She promised she would do it.

Life, however, has a way of meddling in our plans and, suddenly, Cuca was a member of a pop band – Toranja – which, with only a small repertoire, was leaving its mark on Portuguese mainstream music. Those were exciting times, a successful adventure. But there was an emptiness, always an emptiness…

After having taken a degree in Psychology, she decided to participate in a fado competition in Oporto. She learned eight songs. But Cuca’s most important reward came in the form of an unshakeable truth: “This is what I want to do”, she thought at the time. And determined she went in search of her fate.

She spent a year wandering around Lisbon, singing and learning, always learning. She became a regular presence in places where fado was being performed; she spoke to musicians, other fado performers. “There was a world of things to learn which had to do with poetry, with emotion”. She met Ana Moura who encouraged her to continue. And one night she is introduced by Nobre Costa to João Braga, known for his propensity and vision for launching new fado performers in his concerts.

“What are you doing three days from now?” asked the fadista to an extremely impressed Cuca Roseta.

“Nothing.”, she answered.

“Great. You’re going to participate in one of my concerts on television”.

Did anyone mention fate?

Next follows a stint in Clube de Fado. Mário Pacheco, guitarist and owner of the club, has a special ear for new voices. He liked the new fadista and she quickly became part of the prestigious ensemble. During that time she took the opportunity to absorb every single second of fado to which she was exposed. And it was during one of those nights, when she wasn’t even supposed to be there, that justifies the reason for these lines. Just like that, without any planning or hope. A night when, unforeseen, by mere chance, luck or mystery, Cuca Roseta met the Argentinian Gustavo Santaolalla: musician, producer, well-known composer of soundtracks (with Oscars for Babel and Brokeback Mountain). That dogged fate in which Cuca believes more and more. In a quiet but firm voice she confides, as if reliving that night for the first time: “I believe in fate. Things happened naturally, catching me almost by surprise”.

While hearing her sing, Santaolalla, deeply impressed, immediately told her he wanted to record with her. Cuca, sensible, found it strange – because she did not know the identity of this stranger making such an offer. Someone, at last, identified the Argentinian; Cuca apologizes for having no idea he was a producer. Santaolalla answers: “Who I am is not important. What matters is that I saw a star in you”. And he walked out.

The days passed and Gustavo continued to call insisting that Cuca get to know the musical project he had created for her. Meanwhile, other record labels, aware of the producer’s interest, start to besiege Cuca Roseta who refuses all offers with the force which comes from a passionate certainty (“my relationship with Gustavo was truly a case of musical love”), she would later confide. And thus, what had to happen, happened. The record Cuca Roseta was beginning to take form.

All fado performers who follow the circuit of the fado houses go through a terrifying trial when they have to face the loneliness of the studio. The girl who participated in Carlos Saura’s Fados or sang for Benedict XVI during the Pope’s visit to Portugal was able to give it her all, taking advantage of the incredible atmosphere provided by Gustavo Santaolalla. And she confirms: “I didn’t feel very lonely while recording; I surrendered to the emotion”. The result is a beautiful debut album, with a repertoire that includes some classics (“Rua do Capelão”, “Avé Maria Fadista” or “Marcha de Santo António”), other musical fados (the magnificent “Porque Voltas De Que Lei”, lyrics by Amália in collaboration with the producer himself and the tanguero Cristobal Repetto; or “Maré Viva”, a poem by Rosa Lobato Faria translated into Castilian by Santaolalla), and, above all, the affirmation of Cuca Roseta as a lyricist in her own right. Some excellent examples are, “Homem Português” and “Nos Teus Braços”, for which Cuca, also, wrote the music. This “autonomous” talent brings her even closer to her music.

With the perfect musical accompaniment, Mário Pacheco on the guitar, Pedro Pinhal on the viola de fado (six-string guitar of the Spanish form) and Rodrigo Serrão on the double bass. And overseeing it all is Gustavo Santaolalla’s extraordinary sensitivity, giving Cuca time, space and voice to express her feelings and, at last, show them to the world; because the soul is universal.

Perhaps these are difficult times, in which reality is more invasive than we would like. But the soul resists, the soul persists. The almost mystical force which radiates from Cuca Roseta, her faith, the communion with her feelings and nature may give us the hope for redemption from everything by its sheer beauty. When we, once again, insist on fate, she smiles and, once more, disarms us: “All I want to do is to sing”. She gets up, joins the other musicians waiting for her, and her perfectly pitched voice mingles with the Portuguese guitar. And we let ourselves be taken along this path of absolute truth.

Luz

Friday, December 8, 2017

Ana Moura - Moura (Deluxe Version)

Size: 127,8+230,5 MB
Time: 54:29+98:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Fado, World
Art: Front

CD 1:
1. Moura Encantada (4:43)
2. Fado Dançado (2:17)
3. Desamparo (3:36)
4. Dia De Folga (2:37)
5. Ai Eu (4:38)
6. Eu Entrego (Feat. Omara Portuondo) (2:44)
7. Agora E Que E (3:11)
8. Cantiga De Abrigo (3:54)
9. O Meu Amor Foi Para O Brasil (2:50)
10. Ninharia (4:17)
11. Tens Os Olhos De Deus (5:17)
12. Nao Quero Nem Saber (3:05)
13. Moura (4:13)
14. Lilac Wine (Bonus Track) (4:15)
15. Eu Entrego (Bonus Track) (2:45)

CD 2:
1. Moura Encantada (Live) ( 5:32)
2. Ai Eu (Live) ( 5:07)
3. O Meu Amor Foi Para O Brasil (Live) ( 3:37)
4. Fado Dançado (Live) ( 2:41)
5. Desamparo (Live) ( 3:23)
6. Agora E Que E (Live) ( 5:19)
7. Cantiga De Abrigo (Live) ( 4:05)
8. Ninharia (Live) ( 5:23)
9. De Quando Em Vez (Live) ( 3:58)
10. Porque Teimas Nesta Dor (Live) ( 3:50)
11. Maldiçao (Live) (10:45)
12. Eu Entrego (Live) ( 3:09)
13. Nao Quero Nem Saber (Live) ( 3:04)
14. Valentim (Live) ( 3:23)
15. Moura (Live) ( 5:18)
16. Leva-Me Aos Fados (Live) ( 3:02)
17. Os Buzios (Live) ( 4:07)
18. Tens Os Olhos De Deus (Live) ( 5:32)
19. Bailinho A Portuguesa (Live) ( 4:10)
20. Dia De Folga (Live) ( 2:58)
21. Loucura (Live) ( 5:18)
22. Desfado (Live) ( 4:51)

Fado vocalist Ana Moura was born in the historic city of Santarem, on the Tejo River north of Lisbon. As a girl, Moura was steeped in fado and its traditions, brought up in a family where the music was valued and loved, sung at home and at family gatherings. Though she experimented in adolescence with pop and rock music, singing in local bands, Moura's commitment to fado never waned. Even in pop shows, she would include some fado in the repertoire. Moura's shift in emphasis toward her national music began at age 20 when she wandered into one of the many fado houses in her region with a group of friends at age 20. Encouraged by friends to sing for the guitarists and aficionados who were gathered there, Moura was received warmly. She became a regular in the local fado culture. At a casual Christmas party that same year, Moura was discovered by the famous Maria de Fe, who invited Moura to come and sing with her at her house. Her love for the music grew with her reputation, and she began appearing on local television and throughout the regional press. Moura made her recording industry debut with the 2004 Universal Music release Aconteceu. Performances on a variety of important world stages were soon to follow, including N.Y.C.'s Carnegie Hall, among others. A release each year since that time combined with regular touring on the international world music circuit have positioned Ana Moura as the fadista face of her generation. ~ Evan C. Gutierrez

Moura CD 1
Moura CD 2