[acid-jazz] Interview :: Vinicius Cantuaria, Cibelle - Independent

From: Wesley (wesleyc_at_cox.net)
Date: 2003-06-18 06:27:37

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    Interview :: Vinicius Cantuaria, Cibelle - Independent

    piece on Vinicius Cantuaria, and includes talk from Cibelle (!!), whose
    upcoming debut album (Brazilian meets electronic+psych rock+___...)
    sounds really lovely!
    -Wesley
    [Sound :: Lounge] http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SoundLounge

    --
    source: Independent
    Vinicius Cantuaria: Nova nouveau
    Vinicius Cantuaria blends the art of Brazilian bossa nova with pop, jazz 
    and electronica to produce a unique, international sound. He tours the 
    UK next week, writes Phil Johnson
    13 June 2003
    "I try to write this beautiful bossa nova music, with traditional 
    Brazilian grooves and harmony, but then my terrible friends trash it 
    up," says the singer-songwriter Vinicius Cantuaria. He's won't say who 
    the terrible friends are - sometimes he calls them "the dangerous 
    friends" - but they include David Byrne, Laurie Anderson, Brian Eno, 
    Ryuichi Sakamoto, Sean Lennon, Bill Frisell and Arto Lindsay, all of 
    whom appear on Cantuaria's slim but exquisite catalogue of recordings.
    That the Manhattan art-rock elite is happy to contribute to the creative 
    distressing of Cantuaria's work tells you something about how valued an 
    artist he is. It also indicates how much the art of bossa nova - of 
    which Cantuaria is perhaps the leading contemporary exponent - is 
    responding to worldwide changes in musical fashion. As a Brazilian in 
    New York, Cantuaria is perfectly placed to absorb the experiments of the 
    pop and jazz avant-gardes, and to incorporate elements from them in his 
    work. Indeed, this is one reason why he moved to Brooklyn from Rio de 
    Janeiro eight years ago.
    The other reason, he says, is that it makes him feel more at home. 
    "Here, every day, I feel more Brazilian, because when you leave your 
    country you focus on it more. My harmonic perspective, my chords, my 
    melody, they all become more Brazilian. Also, your music can change 
    every day in the US. One day I perform with Arto Lindsay, another day I 
    perform with Bill Frisell. In New York you can find musicians from all 
    over the world; sometimes you can even find US musicians too! It's not 
    just Brazilian music I become more involved in, it's everything; 
    language, art, politics, whatever. It's always about yourself, not just 
    your music."
    I first met Cantuaria four years ago at Ronnie Scott's, where he was 
    presenting songs from his debut album for Verve, Tucuma. The beauty of 
    his songs shone through, and reading the translation of the lyrics 
    afterwards made them more beautiful still. "Let love arrive completely, 
    it alone brings transformation", went the opening verse to "Amor 
    Brasileiro". Set to trumpet, cello, percussion and Cantuaria's own 
    accomplished guitar-playing, the gentle waves of the music lulled you 
    into a kind of narcotic trance. Verve dropped him shortly afterwards.
    Before Tucuma, and the 1996 album Sol Na Cara that preceded it, 
    Cantuaria, now 49, had been the drummer in the band of the Brazilian 
    superstar Caetano Veloso for 10 years, and a member of the rock band O 
    Terco before that. Cantuaria also wrote songs, which have been recorded 
    by Brazilian stars such as Chico Buarque, Gal Costa, Marina and Gilberto 
    Gil. His main influences, he has said, are jazz musicians Chet Baker and 
    Bill Evans and the co-creator of bossa nova, Antonio Carlos Jobim.
    Cantuaria's most recent album, the rapturously received Vinicius (2001), 
    took the amalgam of bossa nova with the avant-garde even further, but we 
    haven't heard the half of him yet. As well as continuing to work with 
    Arto Lindsay, Cantuaria recently became a member of the guitarist Bill 
    Frisell's new group, The Intercontinentals, who look likely to become 
    one of the biggest acts in jazz and world music. His band for next 
    week's British tour consists of two Brazilian percussionists, Nanny 
    Assis and Mauro Refosco, with trumpeter Michael Leonhart and bassist 
    Paul Socolow. "I perform 15, 16, 17 songs, with things from Tucuma for 
    acoustic guitar and hand percussion mixed with experimental things, and 
    stuff with samples and electronics," he says. "Sometimes it's relaxed, 
    and sometimes it's modern and noisy."
    Asked to explain how his music relates to the bossa nova tradition, 
    Cantuaria gives an entertaining discourse on the history of jazz and how 
    it is continuously renewed. "Bossa nova is the opposite. In the 
    beginning, when Jobim played at Carnegie Hall in 1963, everybody loved 
    it, but nothing happened after that. It wasn't until young DJs from 
    England and Europe started to play bossa nova records at dance clubs 
    that it got strong again. Now it's growing, and getting stronger all the 
    time."
    If Cantuaria has taken bossa nova into the 21st century, the 21-year-old 
    vocalist Cibelle might take it into the charts for the first time since 
    Astrud Gilberto with Stan Getz in 1964. Her remarkable debut album 
    Cibelle, on the Ziriguiboom label, pushes the aesthetic further, into 
    pop electronica. Produced by the young Brazilian artist known as Apollo 
    9 and mixed by Morcheeba's Chris Harrison and Pete Norris, Cibelle 
    completes an informal trilogy begun by the late producer Suba with Tanto 
    Tempo and his own Sao Paulo Confessions, on which Cibelle sang.
    Cibelle - who wrote all but one of the album's tunes - downplays the 
    conscious elements in her music in favour of chance, love and 
    inspiration. "We don't just have bossa and samba in Brazil, we have 
    loads of rhythms," she says. "I say it's like cooking; you get all these 
    different elements and you just play about with them."
    Describing her singing as "emotional rather than technical", Cibelle 
    insists that the processes in the recording were "organic", something 
    she learned from Suba. "It was all improvised, we just had fun with it, 
    80 per cent or 90 per cent fun, doing what we liked and not using our 
    brains too much. Then, afterwards, we used our brains."
    The result is thrilling; light and easy on the ear, but full of ideas. 
    Like Bebel Gilberto, however, Cibelle is Brazilian music for anywhere in 
    the world but Brazil, where it's too in advance of popular taste to sell 
    many copies. In comparison, the latest album by the usually reliable 
    Marisa Monte, a huge star in Brazil, sounds hopelessly outdated. Just as 
    Vinicius Cantuaria had to go to New York to find his way back to the 
    music of Brazil, Cibelle may have to be a queen in exile for a while yet.
    'Cibelle' is out now. Vinicius Cantuaria's tour (part of the Arts 
    Council's Contemporary Music Network) begins at the Queen Elizabeth 
    Hall, London SE1 (020-7960 4242) on Monday
    http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/music/interviews/story.jsp?story=415050
    -- 
    The Eclectic Sounds of Japan
    [Sound :: Lounge] http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SoundLounge