
Various Artists
Bossa
Nova Brasil
by Chris McGowan
Bossa Nova has been celebrating its fiftieth birthday
in grand style this year, with commemorations having taken place in
Brazil, the U.S. and other countries. The Brazilian musical genre has
demonstrated an enduring global appeal, and is the favorite type of music
of millions of listeners around the world. Bossa still sounds fresh and
modern despite the worst efforts of a hundred thousand lounge singers who
have committed untold audio atrocities to "The Girl from Ipanema" over the
years from Tokyo to Las Vegas. Recently, there has been a steady stream of
new bossa and bossa-informed releases by notable Brazilian and
international artists, ranging from jazz and classical musicians to rock
and electronica performers. Bossa nova is here for the long term, and few
other musical idioms offer its potent mixture of intimacy, romanticism and
sophistication. Songs like Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Corcovado," "Dindi,"
and "Samba de Uma Nota Só" (One-Note Samba) will be played by friends on
their acoustic guitars in cozy settings for many years to come.
Bossa nova was born in July of 1958 when
singer-guitarist Joao Gilberto released the single "Chega de Saudade" ("No
More Blues" in the U.S.), written by Antonio Carlos "Tom" Jobim and
Vinícius de Moraes, and given further life four months later with
Gilberto's recording of Jobim and Newton Mendonça's remarkable
"Desafinado." Bossa was a new type of samba in which the genre's rhythmic
complexity had been pared down to its bare essentials, transformed into a
kind of "stuttering" beat on Gilberto's guitar that many listeners
recognize immediately. The songs were casual and subtle, yet imbued with
an infectious swing. Gilberto sang the lyrics in a personal, intimate,
whispering style. And Jobim bolstered the beautiful melodies with unusual
harmonies heard before only in the realms of modern classical music or
jazz. Bossa's rhythmic and harmonic richness was expressed with a
sophisticated simplicity, and was something unprecedented in the world of
popular music, in Brazil or elsewhere.*
Alas, the critics in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo
mostly hated it. They were offended by the unconventional harmonies
(calling it "music for off-key singers"), the apparently strong influence
of American jazz, and Gilberto's subdued vocals.
Yet Brazil's musicians "got it" and bossa had a
powerful, catalyzing effect on their musical tastes. Enough of the public
was intrigued by the strange new sound to warrant the release of
Gilberto's Chega de Saudade album the next year, and the style grew
into a national success.
American jazz artists discovered bossa nova a few
years later, and Quincy Jones, Herbie Mann, Paul Winter, Coleman Hawkins,
and Cannonball Adderley all released bossa-themed albums in 1962, as did
Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd. The latter's Jazz Samba made a huge
splash, camping out on the Billboard pop-music charts and eventually
hitting the number-one position, unprecedented for a jazz album. Jazz
Samba ignited a bossa craze in the United States, and a flood of bossa
recordings followed (some bossa in name only). Elvis Presley's peculiar
"Bossa Nova Baby" and Eydie Gormé's "Blame It on the Bossa Nova" were
among the songs capitalizing on the style's popularity. Bossa nova was the
big pop-music trend of the early 1960s, until it was supplanted by the
English rock invasion led by the Beatles. Then, as the bossa fever seemed
just about to wane, Getz teamed with João Gilberto on the Getz/Gilberto
album in 1964.
Getz/Gilberto was
another phenomenonal success and won a Grammy as the best album of the
year, a first for a jazz work. Its centerpiece was Jobim and Moraes's
"Garota de Ipanema," aka "The Girl from Ipanema." Gilberto sang the
Portuguese parts and his wife Astrud performed newly added English lyrics,
with her cool, light, gentle vocals. The breezy song bridged the language
gap with the U.S. audience, won a Grammy for best song, and opened the
minds of many Americans to the richness of Brazilian music. Its smooth
syncopation and graceful lyricism made it into a standard, one of the most
recorded and performed songs of all time.
Jobim, who had played piano on Getz/Gilberto,
appeared on American television variety shows, and released several albums
in the U.S., including two recorded with Frank Sinatra. Sérgio Mendes and
Brasil '66 also kept bossa on the pop charts. The success of the genre
initiated a widespread infiltration of Brazilian music and musicians into
North American music, which ultimately influenced both jazz fusion later
in the decade and the percussion and rhythms of our popular music.
Later, bossa went from hip to kitsch in many
countries after rock and roll took over the global market. There were too
many crooners and lounge singers doing awful, overblown bossa-nova
renditions. Yet, that very association with corny cocktail music helped
spark a bossa revival when "lounge music" came to the forefront in the
1990s, and bossa interpreters like Sérgio Mendes, Wanda Sá, and Walter
Wanderley, and composer Marcos Valle, found a new popularity. At the same
time, hip DJs and producers were mixing bossa and samba with drum loops
and electronic music in a musical movement some called "nova bossa nova."
DJ-producers Gilles Peterson, Niola Conte, Joe Davis (Far Out Records) and
Thievery Corporation's Rob Garza and Eric Hilton were among those
employing bossa and Brazilian sounds in their remixes.
Over the last five decades, bossa nova has had a huge
impact on international music, and countless jazz and pop composers have
incorporated bossa melodies, harmonies, rhythms, and textures into their
works. The best bossa compositions were written by the late Antonio Carlos
Jobim, whose songs are among the most recorded in history. "Água de
Beber," "Só Danço Samba," "Insensatez," "Wave," "Meditação," "Ela É
Carioca," and "Tristeza" are a few of his other compositions not mentioned
above. His work has been so frequently recorded that it is hard to find a
jazz great of the last fifty years who didn't record a Jobim tune. Luiz
Bonfá, Baden Powell, Toquinho, Roberto Menescal, and Carlos Lyra were
other seminal bossa composers, along with the poet Vinícius de Moraes, who
collaborated with many of them. Celso Fonseca, Rosa Passos, Paula
Morelenbaum, and Leila Pinheiro are among the best contemporary artists in
the area.
Bossa nova was also important in the evolution of
Brazilian music, leading directly to the creation of Brazil's rich
eclectic popular music (MPB) that followed in the late 1960s and '70s. It
remains an influence on virtually all young Brazilian musicians today,
whatever their style.
I'm always listening with delight to Jobim and Elis
Regin's superb
Elis & Tom,
Jobim's sublime albums
Urubu
and
Matita Pere
and various bossa collections, and
finding little current popular music that compares in quality.
Blame it on the bossa nova!
© Chris McGowan 2008