Carlos Lyra

The Brazilian Singer-Songwriter And
One Of Bossa Nova's
Leading Figures
Brazilian
Music


Carlos Lyra
various artists perform Lyra's songs
(1999)
Various artists, indeed! Virtually a who's who
of Brazilian music, this album from the Lumiar songbook series features a galaxy
of stars. Every track is by a different artist and has a different treatment.
All in Portugese, of course. If
Carlos Lyra's songs had English lyrics they would be as
well known as the handful of Jobim's that have been translated. This is a
wonderful set of performances; my favourites are Caetano Veloso (alone with his
guitar), Simone, Gal Costa and Jobim himself (with a little choir of his own
daughters and other famous surnames). Only one track of the great Carlos
himself, but you need a separate CD for him anyway. Highly recommended.
--an Amazon.com reviewer
Carlos Lyra (Millennium Series)
retrospective album with 20 Lyra songs
(2002)

Carlos Lyra: Sarava!
(Serie
100 Anos De Musica)
(1970)
Carlos Lyra
was one of the founding members of Brazil's bossa nova revolution... This is a
nice mellow, old-school bossa album, recorded in Mexico in 1970, when Lyra and
other Brazilian luminaries were in cultural exile. This dips a bit into iffy pop
territory, but mostly it's exactly the kind of gentle gem that fans of lounge,
bossa and jazz are all looking for. Recommended!
--an Amazon.com reviewer

Sambalanço
(2002)
Carlos Lyra & Paul Winter

The
Sound Of Ipanema / Rio
double album: the first
features Carlos Lyra;
the second has Luiz Bonfa
and Roberto Menescal
(1964)
Carlos Lyra Links
Carlos Lyra Official
Home Page
Carlos Lyra Biography (by Mauro
Ferreira)
When Tom Jobim affirms that
Carlos Lyra
is the great "connoisseur of the paths," the master
does not exaggerate.An exceptional melodist, Lyra was born historically together
with bossa nova. His inspired melodies have resisted over the years, proving
that the true path is artistic independence. Lyra and bossa nova are enmeshed,
but the author of Primavera has always maintained his musical identity. The
first song by Lyra to be recorded on an LP (Criticando, recorded in 1956
by the group Os Cariocas) is a forerunner of the classic Influência do jazz and
already showed that the author would maintain his autonomy in relationship to
the old bossa, although history would place him in the role of one of the
natural leaders of the bossa nova movement (if one can talk about a "movement").
Lyra’s identity is sharply and immediately revealed in his first record,
Carlos Lyra,
Bossa Nova, released in
1959. And a certain Maria Ninguém was already imposing her presence next to
classics such as Quando chegares, Menina and Rapaz de bem (a composition by
Johnny Alf which Lyra launched). Even at this early
date, Lyra’s musical universe was no longer restricted to the delicious salt,
sun and “Sul” carioca (the sophisticated southern district of Rio de Janeiro).
Although this would only become apparent in the second and divergent phase of
the - well, why not - movement.
The latent dichotomy which germinated among the bossa novists would spring to
the fore more strongly in 1961. In this year, Lyra releases his second record
with jewels such as Minha namorada, Você e eu and Coisa mais linda. But his head
(and his guitar) were already pointing in another direction. This same year, he
becomes one of the founders of the Centro Popular de Cultura, the popular CPC of
the UNE (União Nacional dos Estudantes or National Student Union. The CPC was a
student organization that counted on the orientation of a pool of intellectuals
from diverse areas of culture). This tie, ever more closely linked to theater
and cinema (which in this period was also “New”), politicizes Lyra’s work. Of
course, nothing comes about quite so abruptly. In 1960, Lyra had already
composed the score for the play A mais valia vai acabar, Seu Edgar, written by
political militant Oduvaldo Vianna Filho. Not to mention Lyra’s later
collaboration with the directors of the Arena Theatre.
The foundation was in place for Lyra to transform the bossa of "love, smiles and
flowers" (in reference to the first phase of bossa nova) into music with both
feet firmly planted on the ground, consistent with a reality which was already
beginning to show signs of political incoherency. Lyra immediately joined the
group of dissidents and activists, bringing dissonance to all the choruses
formed by those satisfied with the "cool" (and already distant) aesthetic of the
song and the poetry of João Gilberto and Company. Lyra’s third record, released
in 1963, now brought Influência do jazz and Aruanda. The samba left the
apartment of the middle class southern district to climb up the hills toward the
shantytowns and "favelas". In the opposite lane, Zé Keti, João do Vale, Nelson
Cavaquinho and Cartola were coming down toward the city's asphalt and the CPC
(Centro Popular de Cultura, the Popular Center for Culture), to show that all
was not flowers in that Brazil of 1963 and 1964. Lyra was already aware of this.
The conscientious Canção do Subdesenvolvido composed in 1963 together with Chico
de Assis, already made explicit an ideology uncomfortable for more conservative
sectors.
The climate clouded over with the military coupe of 1964 and the way out, for
Lyra, was self-exile. From 1964 to 1971, Lyra was out of Brazil. While abroad,
he came to realize that the two bossa nova "universes" were not as incompatible
as they had seemed. He played with Stan Getz in the US
and recorded two records in Mexico. His song, E no entanto é preciso cantar said
it all: "In spite of everything, one must sing"—and play in Brazil. On his
return, Lyra re-recorded his own classics. The alienated masses had not
forgotten the beautiful bossa nova melodies, but the composer's conscience cried
out even louder. After three records released without the same impact as their
predecessors, the author of Feio não é bonito goes to an extreme with his
incisive, Herói Do Medo,
Continental, 1974, a record whose lyrics with their deliberate double-entendres,
tried to remind Brazilians that, while the multitudes sidestepped their own
conscience by concentrating on the goals of the national soccer team and the
plots from the soap operas, people were being tortured and killed in a fight for
democracy. But the pressure was great.
The result - a censured record and a second self-exile. In 1974, Lyra went to
Los Angeles, returning two years later to sing in never-ending shows the
melodies that all still wanted to hear. The revival seemed infinite, an
incessant nostalgia. Opening in 1984, the show 25 Years of Bossa Nova ran for
five years and gave birth in 1987 to a live recording, marketed under the same
name. Linked to a brilliant era, Lyra continues to blaze the paths praised by
Tom Jobim - and these paths are, and always will be, trails of the most inspired
of Brazilian music. --Mauro Ferreira
(from the
Carlos
Lyra Official Home Page)