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It has been said that Antonio Carlos Brasileiro
de Almeida Jobim was the George Gershwin of Brazil ˜ and there is a
solid ring of truth in that, for both contributed large bodies of songs
to the jazz repertoire, both expanded their reach into the concert hall,
and both tend to symbolize their countries in the eyes of the rest of the
world. With their gracefully urbane, sensuously aching melodies and harmonies,
Jobim's songs gave jazz musicians in the 1960s a quiet, strikingly original
alternative to their traditional Tin Pan Alley source.
Jobim's roots were always planted firmly in jazz; the records of Gerry
Mulligan, Chet Baker, Barney Kessel and other West Coast jazz musicians
made an enormous impact upon him in the 1950s. But he also claimed that
the French impressionist composer Claude Debussy had a decisive influence
upon his harmonies, and the Brazilian samba gave his music a uniquely
exotic rhythmic underpinning. As a pianist, he usually kept things simple
and melodically to the point with a touch that reminds some of Claude
Thornhill, but some of his records show that he could also stretch out
when given room. His guitar was limited mostly to gentle strumming of
the syncopated rhythms, and he sang in a modest, slightly hoarse yet often
hauntingly emotional manner.
Born in the Tijuca neighborhood of Rio, Jobim originally was headed for
a career as an architect. Yet by the time he turned 20, the lure of music
was too powerful, and so he started playing piano in nightclubs and working
in recording studios. He made his first record in 1954 backing singer
Bill Farr as the leader of "Tom and His Band" (Tom was Jobim's
lifelong nickname), and he first found fame in 1956 when he teamed up
with poet Vinicius de Moraes to provide part of the score for a play called
Orfeo do Carnaval (later made into the famous film Black Orpheus). In
1958, the then-unknown Brazilian singer Joao Gilberto recorded some of
Jobim's songs, which had the effect of launching the phenomenon known
as bossa nova. Jobim's breakthrough outside Brazil occured in 1962 when
Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd scored a surprise hit with his tune "Desafinado"
˜ and later that year, he and several other Brazilian musicians were
invited to participate in a Carnegie Hall showcase. Fueled by Jobim's
songs, the bossa nova became an international fad, and jazz musicians
jumped on the bandwagon recording album after album of bossa novas until
the trend ran out of commercial steam in the late '60s.
Jobim himself preferred the recording studios to touring, making several
lovely albums of his music as a pianist, guitarist and singer for Verve,
Warner Bros., Discovery, A&M, CTI and MCA in the '60s and '70s, and
Verve again in the last decade of his life. Early on, he started collaborating
with arranger/conductor Claus Ogerman, whose subtle, caressing, occasionally
moody charts gave his records a haunting ambience. When Brazilian music
was in its American eclipse after the '60s, a victim of overexposure and
the burgeoning rock revolution, Jobim retreated more into the background,
concentrating much energy upon film and TV scores in Brazil. But by 1985,
as the idea of world music and a second Brazilian wave gathered steam,
Jobim started touring again with a group containing his second wife Ana
Lontra, his son Paulo, daughter Elizabeth and various musician friends.
At the time of his final concerts in Brazil in September 1993 and at Carnegie
Hall in April 1994 (both available on Verve), Jobim at last was receiving
the universal recognition he deserved, and a plethora of tribute albums
and concerts followed in the wake of his sudden death in New York City
of heart failure. Jobim's reputation as one of the great songwriters of
the century is now secure, nowhere more so than on the jazz scene where
every other set seems to contain at least one bossa nova.
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