Look To the Rainbow [Digipak]Astrud Gilberto
Release Date: 06/03/2008
Original Release:
1967
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1024955_CD
UPC # 602517679269
Label: Verve (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Astrud Gilberto
Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: This 2008 reissue of Astrud Gilberto's LOOK TO THE RAINBOW restores the original 1967 LP's 11-track configuration. (The previous CD version included six songs from a previous Gilberto collaboration with Brazilian organist Walter Wanderly.) With arrangements provided by Gil Evans and saxophonist Al Cohn, it's also perhaps Gilberto's most jazz-oriented session, starting off with the percussive "Berimbau," sung in the original Portuguese. Since this is just as much a Gil Evans project, we are also treated to one of his signature slow meditations on "I Will Wait For You," which perfectly supports Gilberto's typically plaintive vocal. There are some bossa nova standards here too--Jobim's "A Felicidade" and the perky "Bim Bom"--in addition to the lovely "Once Upon A Summertime," whose evanescence this wonderfully remastered edition reveals as if for the first time. The 2008 reissue of Astrud Gilberto's LOOK TO THE RAINBOW restores the original 1967 LP's 11-track configuration. (The previous CD version included six songs from a previous Gilberto collaboration with Brazilian organist Walter Wanderly.) With arrangements provided by Gil Evans and saxophonist Al Cohn, it's also perhaps Gilberto's most jazz-oriented session, starting off with the percussive "Berimbau," sung in the original Portuguese. Since this is just as much a Gil Evans project, we are also treated to one of his signature slow meditations on "I Will Wait For You," which perfectly supports Gilberto's typically plaintive vocal. There are some bossa nova standards here too--Jobim's "A Felicidade" and the perky "Bim Bom"--in addition to the lovely "Once Upon A Summertime," whose evanescence this wonderfully remastered edition reveals as if for the first time.
Brazilian vocalist Astrud Gilberto was a key figure in the bossa nova movement that moved beyond Brazil to sweep the world in the early-to-mid 1960s. As a featured vocalist on the landmark 1963 GETZ/GILBERTO release by American jazz saxophonist Stan Getz and Astrud's then-husband, guitarist/singer Joao Gilberto, the young lady from Bahia took the music world by storm, especially on the huge hit "Girl From Ipanema," destined to become a standard. Influenced as much by American "cool jazz" as by the Brazilian composers like Antonio Carlos Jobim whose work she interpreted, Gilberto had a sultry, low-key style that stood out amid the overblown pop productions of the era, and her blend of pop, jazz, and Brazilian sounds helped sow the first seeds of what we now know as "world music."
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Andrade, Leny Basia Bethania, Maria Bonfa, Luiz Buarque, Chico Castro-Neves, Oscar Caymmi, Dori Ceu Cibelle Da Lata Daude Dave's True Story Donato, Joao Elias, Eliane Franks, Michael Getz, Stan Gil, Gilberto Gilberto, Bebel Gilberto, Joao Jones, Norah Krall, Diana Leao, Nara Lobo, Edu Menescal, Roberto Powell, Baden Regina, Elis Rodrigues, Jair Sade Sete, Bola Valle, Marcos Veloso, Caetano
Influences:
Alf, Johnny Baker, Chet Christy, June Cole, Nat "King" Connor, Chris De Moraes, Vinicius Evans, Bill (Piano) Evans, Gil Fitzgerald, Ella Jobim, Antonio Carlos London, Julie Merrill, Helen Sinatra, Frank Torme, Mel Vaughan, Sarah
Similar Genres:
Bossa Nova |