Showing posts with label Ralf Schmid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ralf Schmid. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

SWR Big Band, Ralf Schmid, Paula Morelenbaum - Bossarenova

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:56
Size: 178.4 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Big band
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 5:23] 1. Águas De Março
[ 4:40] 2. Chovendo Na Roseira
[ 4:18] 3. Blackbird
[ 4:04] 4. Mas, Que Nada
[ 3:33] 5. Modinha (Seresta No.6)
[ 3:37] 6. Perfume De Cebolla
[ 4:34] 7. Tarde Em Itapoã
[ 4:27] 8. Tempo De Amor
[ 3:54] 9. Vem Morena
[ 5:01] 10. Pra Que Chorar [ich Grolle Nicht]
[ 4:10] 11. O Morro Não Tem Vez [favela]
[22:26] 12. Setembro
[ 3:52] 13. L'habitant Du Ciel
[ 3:52] 14. Soul Bossa Nova

It is nearly impossible to speak about Paula Morelenbaum without mentioning Antonio Carlos Jobim. To those unfamiliar with her work, it is worth noting that Paula worked for ten years (1984 to 1994) singing alongside the Brazilian maestro. She participated in the recording of the albums Passarim (1986-Universal), Antonio Brasileiro (1993-Som Livre), Tom Jobim Inédito (1995-BMG) and Tom canta Vinicius (2000-Jobim Music/Universal), while performing with his group Banda Nova in Brazil, Japan, Europe, Canada and the United States, including shows at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. Jobim, himself, once described the band as "a group of five handsome girls, five handsome guys and a dirty old man!" Paula Morelenbaum's solo career began during the latter years of that collaboration. In 1992, she released her first solo album. The self-titled effort was produced by her husband and acclaimed cellist Jaques Morelenbaum, who also participated as an instrumentalist and arranger on a handful of tracks. The disc included songs from Gilberto Gil, Chico Buarque, Caetano Veloso, Rita Lee, Arrigo Barnabé, Paulo Jobim, Jose Miguel Wisnik, George Gershwin, Vinicius de Moraes and Tom Jobim (who also performed on the recording). It was this album with which Paula was awarded the Sharp Music Award 1993 in Brazil for the category "Revelation Female Pop-Rock." In 1995, Morelenbaum formed the Quarteto Jobim Morelenbaum with Paulo Jobim, Daniel Jobim and Jaques Morelenbaum, a quartet of vocal and instrumental chamber music whose repertoire was based on perpetuating the style of Antonio Carlos Jobim. Four years later the quartet released the album Quarteto Jobim Morelenbaum (Candles/Sony Music) and presented the music with a world tour that stretched around the globe. 
That same year Paula served as vocalist on the recording Smoochy by Ryuichi Sakamoto. The seed of a new and fruitful collaboration had been been planted. With Ryuichi Sakamoto and husband Jaques Morelenbaum, Paula launched the trio Morelenbaum2/Sakamoto in 2001 and soon released the album Casa (Kab/Universal Music), a tribute to Antonio Carlos Jobim, recorded at the maestro's home. This was followed by yet another world tour, which further extended her burgeoning international fan base and resulted in the live album Live in Tokyo 2001 (Warner Music Japan) and its subsequent 2003 follow up, A Day in New York (Kab/Sony Classical/Universal Music/Warner Music Japan), which as the title suggests was recorded in NYC all in one day. The CD earned them the 2004 Tim Brazilian Music Award in the category "Best Brazilian Music Group."

Now at the peak of her musical maturity, Paula Morelenbaum's latest work is a collaboration with the stellar Germany-based SWR Big Band and arranger/conductor Ralf Schmid. Together they created the album Bossarenova (ObliqSound/Skip Records). As the title describes, the work is a "restoration" of the classic Bossa Nova repertoire, yet distinctively re-imagined through the inspired pairing of Paula and Ralf. On the collection, she interprets timeless pieces such as "Agua De Março (Waters of March)" and "Chovendo na Roseira" by Antonio Carlos Jobim, "Mas Que Nada" and "Vem Morena" by Jorge Ben, "Tarde em Itapuã" by Toquinho and Vinicius de Moraes and rescues the beautiful "Tempo de amor" by Baden Powell and Vinicius.

In addition to these Bossa Nova's masterpieces, there are a number of reinterpretations that had a great influence on the Bossa Nova masters, such as compositions by Robert Schumann, Heitor Villa-Lobos and Lennon & McCartney. On the album, Paula Morelenbaum is deftly supported by the 16 musicians in the SWR Big Band, as well the renowned German trumpeter and co-founder of the 90's European acid jazz duet Tap Two Joo Kraus, pianist and arranger Ralf Schmid and Brazilian special guests Lula Galvão and Portinho. The US version of the release features two exclusive mixes of the songs "Aguas de Março" and "Modinha" reworked by producer Michele Locatelli and an exclusive Michael Olatuja remix of the classic Quincy Jones hit "Soul Bossa Nova," which appears on the album as an instrumental bonus track.

Bossarenova