Showing posts with label Bossa Nova. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bossa Nova. Show all posts

Monday, 4 November 2024

Fill my heart with song, and let me sing for ever more

Grrr. Monday again, and to make the mood even more sombre than usual we are greeted by sad news - the genius that was Quincy Jones has departed (at the venerable age of 91) for that great Montreux Festival in the sky.

He worked with just about everybody in the business in a career that spanned 70 years, from Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey, Lionel Hampton, Gene Krupa, Ella Fitzgerald and Dizzy Gillespie, to Anita O'Day, Miles Davis, Aretha Franklin, Sarah Vaughan and Lena Horne, to Michael Jackson, Donna Summer, Patti Austin, James Ingram, Diana Ross, Brothers Johnson, George Benson and even Amy Winehouse.

His collaborations with Frank Sinatra and Count Basie were regarded as the pinnacle of their recording careers, not least for this:

A masterclass in how to arrange a song around a singer - his complete revision of Noël Coward's classic paean to unrequited love; a gift for the diva Dinah Washington:

His work in the Disco era and beyond (that made him such a fortune, courtesy of Michael Jackson's massive-selling Off The Wall, Thriller and Bad albums) also saw Quincy step out from behind the scenes to gain a few hits of his own, including this one:

A few decades later, and a certain toothy 1960s spy gave Mr Jones's very first single back in 1962 a new lease of life, to huge success:

And finally, no - I haven't forgotten that it's a Tacky Music Monday, nor the (surprising) fact that one of Mr Jones's earliest ventures into the big time was as the producer of the archetypal purveyor of tearful teen ballads, Miss Lesley Gore!

RIP, Quincy Delight Jones Jr. (14th March 1933 – 3rd November 2024)

Saturday, 7 September 2024

Sai da minha frente, eu quero passar

And so, farewell, Sérgio Mendes - the man who almost single-handedly made the Brazilian "New Wave" sounds of bossa nova into a cool, internationally-successful pop genre in the 1960s - who has packed up his piano, bongos and Cuica and departed for the "Tiki Lounge" in Fabulon. [To be honest, who even knew he was still with us?]

There is only one song to play, really!

Sérgio Mendes and Brasil 66 - Mas Que Nada (introduced by Eartha Kitt)

Mas que nada
Sai da minha frente
Eu quero passar
Pois o samba está animado
O que eu quero é sambar

[which roughly translates as]

Whatever!
Get out of my way
I wanna pass
Because samba is exciting
And I wanna dance [samba]

Descanse em paz, Sérgio Santos Mendes (11th February 1941 – 5th September 2024)

Tuesday, 6 June 2023

Swings so cool and sways so gently

Another outing for the black armbands today, with the news that the very lovely Astrud Gilberto has departed for Fabulon - accompanied by the gentle sounds of bossa nova guitars, no doubt.

Without further ado, let's celebrate the great lady's sublime talents...

...and, of course, the song for which she is most remembered [one of the most-covered songs of all time, apparently]...

RIP, Astrud Gilberto (born Astrud Evangelina Weinert, 29th March 1940 – 5th June 2023)

Tuesday, 14 March 2023

Sixties? Or Nineties?

Among a raft of birthdays today, including Albert Einstein, Mrs Beeton, Eleanor Bron, King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy, Les Brown, Casey Jones, lesbian bookseller and patron of James Joyce Sylvia Beach, Diane Arbus, Johann Strauss Sr., Bill Owen, Jona Lewie, Rita Tushingham, Les Baxter, Billy Crystal, Jasper Carrott, Prince Albert of Monaco, and - erm - Rick Dees of Disco Duck fame, we have not one, but two milestones to celebrate today, dear reader...

...and both with a link to Swinging 60s London [so here's a little something I made earlier (slightly tweaked)]:

Maurice Micklewhite - aka Sir Michael Caine - is a stalwart of British cinema, and he blows out 90 candles on his cake today! He rose to fame as the super-cool "Harry Palmer" [a working-class equivalent of James Bond] in The Ipcress File, as the eponymous "Jack-the-Lad" Alfie, and (of course) as Cockney wide-boy "Charlie Croker" in that archetypal British 60s classic The Italian Job...

...the latter blockbuster [always on telly here, particularly over the Xmas-New Year break] featured a score written by another towering figure with whom Sir Michael shares not merely a birthday, but a birth-date - Mr Quincy Jones, composer, producer, orchestrator and a man who has worked with just about everybody (from the Dorsey brothers to Michael Jackson; from Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald to Patti Austin and Chaka Khan)...

...then in the 1990s, a "tribute" to the Swinging 60s became a massive cinematic success, and Quincy's addictive Soul Bossa Nova was resurrected for the occasion:


[...and Sir Michael appeared in the second sequel...]

Yeah, Baby, Yeah!

Sir Michael Caine, CBE (born Maurice Joseph Micklewhite Jr., 14th March 1933)

Quincy Delight Jones Jr. (born 14th March 1933)


FOOTNOTE:

A tribute:

Thursday, 10 November 2022

Quiet nights of quiet stars

RIP, the Queen of Tropicália, Gal Costa...

Here's just a mere pitada of the lady's fabulous talent - as she revists a classc from her roots in bossa nova:

Sublime.

Sunday, 7 March 2021

The Boss of Bossa


Tulip “Giuseppe Verdi” - a true herald of Spring.

It was unexpectedly warm and sunny today, so we managed to get out into the extensive gardens here at Dolores Delargo Towers, and to carry on the mission at this time of year - to "banish ugliness". Anything raggy or dead needs either pruning or binning, and several pots of biennials like foxgloves and forget-me-nots that should have been dealt with in autumn are finally in the ground (once the thousands of bloody sprouting sycamore seeds were scraped out of the way). My back's in half now, but it was a rewarding few hours' worth of slog!

I think a little relaxing music is in order...

How about a lovely bit of Bossa Nova? That'll do nicely.

I love that old fella - he's got it all sorted. His own table, booze, fags, ashtray - "Oh. You want me to sing now? OK..."

Wednesday, 10 July 2019

The lyrics and the melody don't even rhyme


Gay Pride on Saturday was a bit of a carnival at times.

Another little piece of news we missed amongst the mayhem of last weekend was one of those peculiar existential moments when you hear about the passing of a famous individual, and only at that point realise you never even knew they were still going...

Thus is was when I found out that Senhor João Gilberto - the "father of bossa nova" - had departed for Fabulon. The songs he brought to the fore (many in collaboration with his contemporaries Antônio Carlos Jobim and Stan Getz) were, and remain, absolute classics; notably The Girl From Ipanema, One Note Samba, Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars (Corcovado) - and this one!


And, for your delectation, here's the classic version by the legendary Ella:


RIP, João Gilberto Prado Pereira de Oliveira (10th June 1931 – 6th July 2019)

Wednesday, 14 March 2018

What say, you, we go out on the town and swing, baby? Yeah!



Connections, connections...

Two milestone birthdays today, and both with a link to Swinging 60s London.

Maurice Micklewhite - aka Sir Michael Caine - is a stalwart of British cinema, and he blows out 85 candles on his cake today! He rose to fame as the super-cool "Harry Palmer" [a working-class equivalent of James Bond] in The Ipcress File, as the eponymous "Jack-the-Lad" Alfie, and (of course) as Cockney wide-boy "Charlie Croker" in that archetypal British 60s classic The Italian Job...



...the latter blockbuster [always on telly here, particularly over the Xmas-New Year break] featured a score written by another towering figure with whom Sir Michael shares not merely a birthday, but a birth-date - Mr Quincy Jones, composer, producer, orchestrator and a man who has worked with just about everybody (from the Dorsey brothers to Michael Jackson; from Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald to Patti Austin and Chaka Khan)...

...then in the 1990s, a "tribute" to the Swinging 60s became a massive cinematic success, and Quincy's addictive Soul Bossa Nova was resurrected for the occasion:


[...and Sir Michael appeared in the second sequel...]

Yeah, Baby, Yeah!

Sir Michael Caine, CBE (born Maurice Joseph Micklewhite Jr., 14th March 1933)

Quincy Delight Jones Jr. (born 14th March 1933)

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Quiet star



Eighty-five years ago today, the "father of Bossa Nova" Antônio Carlos Brasileiro de Almeida (Tom) Jobim was born.

To commemorate, I am definitely in a sultry samba mode, so here are some of his classics...




Antonio Carlos Jobim (January 25, 1927 – December 8, 1994) on Wikipedia

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Tall and tan and young and lovely

As today is Astrud Gilberto's birthday, there is really only one song I can play...


Astrud Gilberto website

Thursday, 10 June 2010

Bim bom bim bim bom bom



Feliz aniversário, João Gilberto!

Known as the "Father of Bossa Nova", Snr Gilberto was hugely influential on musical tastes not just in South and North America, but worldwide - providing a boost to 60s jazz, bebop and beatnik styles, and he was the catalyst for a renewed interest in all types of Latin rhythms which in turn influenced revolutions in dance music. He collaborated with some of the top musicians of all styles and genres, including Stan Getz, Herbie Mann, Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso, and has sold millions of records over six decades.

Despite his massive popularity, Gilberto prefers to live the quiet life away from the spotlight in his native Rio de Janeiro. His innovative and influential music, however, is still as wonderful as when it was first heard all those years ago...


Here's his lovely missus (at the time) Astrud, with his first Bossa Nova hit:


And here is his early (original) version of the classic Girl From Ipanema:


João Gilberto, The Man Who Invented Bossa Nova