Monday, 9 June 2008

Caetano Veloso

Caetano Veloso   
Artist: Caetano Veloso

   Genre(s): 
Latin
   Other
   



Discography:


Joia   
 Joia

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 13


A Foreign Sound   
 A Foreign Sound

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 22


Eu N o Pelo Desculpa   
 Eu N o Pelo Desculpa

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 14


O Maggio a Federico e Giulietta   
 O Maggio a Federico e Giulietta

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 18


Noites do Norte ao Vivo (cd2)   
 Noites do Norte ao Vivo (cd2)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 16


Noites do Norte ao Vivo (cd1)   
 Noites do Norte ao Vivo (cd1)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 16


Noites do Norte   
 Noites do Norte

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 12


Prenda Minha   
 Prenda Minha

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 20


Livro   
 Livro

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 14


Fina Estampa (Live)   
 Fina Estampa (Live)

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 17


Fina Estampa Ao Vivo   
 Fina Estampa Ao Vivo

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 17


Fina Estampa   
 Fina Estampa

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 15


Tropicalia 2   
 Tropicalia 2

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 12


Circulado Vivo   
 Circulado Vivo

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 19


Circuladt   
 Circuladt

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 11


Estrangeiro   
 Estrangeiro

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 10


Caetano (Jose)   
 Caetano (Jose)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 11


Totalmente Demais   
 Totalmente Demais

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 16


Caetano Veloso   
 Caetano Veloso

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 13


Velo   
 Velo

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 11


Uns   
 Uns

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 11


Cores, Nomes   
 Cores, Nomes

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 12


Outras Palavras   
 Outras Palavras

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 13


Cinema Transcendental   
 Cinema Transcendental

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 12


Muito   
 Muito

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 12


Maria Bethania and Caetano Veloso ao Vivo   
 Maria Bethania and Caetano Veloso ao Vivo

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 12


Muitos Carnavais   
 Muitos Carnavais

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 12


Bicho   
 Bicho

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 9


Doces Barbaros (cd2)   
 Doces Barbaros (cd2)

   Year: 1976   
Tracks: 7


Doces Barbaros (cd1)   
 Doces Barbaros (cd1)

   Year: 1976   
Tracks: 10


Qualquer Coisa   
 Qualquer Coisa

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 12


Temporada De Ver o Ao Vivo Na Bahia   
 Temporada De Ver o Ao Vivo Na Bahia

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 9


Araka azul   
 Araka azul

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 10


Transa   
 Transa

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 7


Caetano Veloso (A Little More Blue)   
 Caetano Veloso (A Little More Blue)

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 7


Caetano Veloso (1969)   
 Caetano Veloso (1969)

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 12


Tropicalia ou Panis Et Circensis   
 Tropicalia ou Panis Et Circensis

   Year: 1968   
Tracks: 12


Caetano Veloso (Tropicalia)   
 Caetano Veloso (Tropicalia)

   Year: 1968   
Tracks: 12




A true heavyweight, Caetano Veloso is a pop Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, and Lennon/McCartney. And even the to the highest degree casual listen to his recorded output o'er the last few decades proves that this is no exaggeration.


Born in 1942 in Santo Amaro da Purificacao in Brazil's Bahia region, Veloso wrapped the rich Bahian musical heritage that was influenced by Caribbean, African, and North American pop music, just it was the cool, seductive bossa nova sound of João Gilberto (a Brazilian star in the fifties) that formed the cornerstone of Veloso's intensely eclectic pour down. Following his baby Maria Bethânia (a identical successful singer in her possess right) to Rio in the early '60s, the 23-year-old Veloso north Korean won a lyric-writing contest with his sung "Um Dia" and was promptly signed to the Phillips label. It wasn't prospicient earlier Veloso (along with other Brazilian stars such as Gal Costa and Gilberto Gil) delineated the modern wave of MPB (i.e., musica popular brasileira), the general-purpose term victimised by Brazilians to distinguish their pop music. Bright, ambitious, creative, and tending to an unapologetically left-winger political expectation, Veloso would soon become a controversial figure in Brazilian pop. By 1967, he had become aligned with Brazil's burgeoning hippie movement and, along with Gilberto Gil, created a new pattern of pour down music dubbed Tropicalia. Arty and eclectic, Tropicalia retained a bossa nova influence, adding bits and pieces of folk-rock and fine art rock candy to a grudge of loud electric guitars, poetic spoken parole sections, and jazz-like dissonance. Although not initially well received by traditional pop-loving Brazilians (both Veloso and Gil faced the wrath of old fans similar to the choler provoked by Dylan upon expiration electric), Tropicalia was a breathless stylistic deductive reasoning that signaled a novel genesis of daring, provocative, and politically outspoken musicians wHO would remaking the face of MPB.


This was a cultural stir not without considerable dangers. Since 1964, Brazil had been ruled by a military dictatorship (a regime that would principle for 20 long time) that did non expect good-hearted upon such radical medicine made by such group musicians. Almost immediately on that point were government-sanctioned attempts to circumscribe the recordings and live performances of many tropicalistas. Censorship of song lyrics as well as radio and television system play lists (Veloso was a regular TV performer on Brazilian diverseness shows) was common. Just as vulgar was the persecution of performers openly decisive of the authorities, and Veloso and Gil were at the top of the hit number. Both men exhausted deuce months in prison house for "anti-government natural process" and some other 4 months under house turn back. After a defiant 1968 performance in concert, Veloso and Gil were constrained into exile in London. Veloso continued to record overseas and write songs for other Tropicalia stars, but he would not be allowed to return to Brazil permanently until 1972.


Although his commitment to politicized artistic creation ne'er wavered, Veloso, over the side by side 20 days, went from existence a very popular Brazilian singer/songwriter to becoming the center of Brazilian pop. For decades he unbroken up a grueling yard of transcription, producing, and acting and, in the mid-'70s, added authorship to his résumé, publishing a book of articles, poems, and song lyrics covering a period from 1965 to 1976. In the '80s, Veloso became increasingly better known outside of Brazil, touring in Africa, Paris, and Israel, interviewing Mick Jagger for Brazilian TV, and in 1983, playing America for the first clock time. (He sold out trey nights at the Public Theater in New York with shows that were ecstatically reviewed by then-New York Times pop critic Robert Palmer.) This firm increase in popularity occurred despite the fact that Veloso's records were extremely hard to recover in American record stores, and when one could situate them, they were expensive Brazilian imports. Still, the buzz on Veloso grew, thanks in section to Palmer, Robert Christgau, and former critics writing near pop music outside of the neighboring 48 states. But Veloso ne'er seemed daunted by his depressed profile outside of Brazil, and his put to work over the years, even later on he became a more well-known international belt down figure, remained thought-provoking and intriguing without beingness modified for American (or anyone else's) tastes -- that is, Veloso sang in English (almost of his recorded work is song in Portuguese) when he matte up like it, not because he had to sell more than records in America. He hung out with fair trendy New York musicians (Brazilian native Arto Lindsay and David Byrne), only never made a big deal about it. Veloso was one of the rare musicians world Health Organization was popular, sold a draw of records (at least in Brazil), was a certified superstar, simply was never self-aggrandising, narcissistic, or too concerned with how hip he was.


Regular when he approached the age of normal retirement, Veloso showed no signs of slowing depressed. After his 1989 recording Estrangeiro (produced by Ambitious Lovers' Arto Lindsay and Peter Scherer) became his outset nonimport outlet in America, Veloso's stateside profile increased significantly, reach its highest power point with the acquittance of 1993's Tropicália 2, recorded with Gilberto Gil. A glorious record book that made a curve of American ten-best lists, Tropicália 2 proven once again that Veloso's gift (as well as Gil's) had non vitiated a spot. His early-'90s recordings, Circuladô, Fina Estampa, and Circuladô ao Vivo (the latter of which includes versions of Michael Jackson's "Dark and White" and Dylan's "Jokerman"), were uniformly fantastic, and in the summer of 1997 Veloso embarked on his largest American hitch to date.


Deuce long time later, Veloso was the subject of an extensive, flattering portrayal in Spin on the eve of the American release of his acclaimed 1998 album Livro. In 1999, he released Omaggio a Federico e Giulietta, a tribute to auteur Federico Fellini and his married woman, actress Giulietta Masina. He likewise south Korean won a Grammy for the Best MPB Album for 1998's Livro at the outset annual Latin Grammy Awards. After the end of the millennium, Veloso delivered a bossa nova album, the enlivened Noites do Norte, a live record book from Bahia, a coaction with poet Jorge Mautner, and the songbook album A Foreign Sound. In 2006 Veloso returned with Cê, a typically divers and interesting album co-produced by his boy Moreno.





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