A towering figure in the history of Brazilian culture, over the past 15 years Chico Buarque has been progressively distancing himself from music, choosing instead to concentrate on his many other projects, such as his internationally acclaimed novels. Contrary to his restless peer Caetano Veloso, Buarque has always been a classicist, either working inside traditional genres such as the samba and the choro (rather than blowing them apart) or coming up with new ones. Looking back at his 45-year career (and almost as many ...
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A towering figure in the history of Brazilian culture, over the past 15 years Chico Buarque has been progressively distancing himself from music, choosing instead to concentrate on his many other projects, such as his internationally acclaimed novels. Contrary to his restless peer Caetano Veloso, Buarque has always been a classicist, either working inside traditional genres such as the samba and the choro (rather than blowing them apart) or coming up with new ones. Looking back at his 45-year career (and almost as many albums), it is easy to understand Buarque when he says he is not writing songs anymore because he feels he has exhausted himself; after all, the man has written literally hundreds of undisputed masterpieces. His most recent offerings, of which the simply titled Chico is the latest, have been few and far between, and in the greater scheme of things will probably add little to his monumental legacy. Still, considering that in all of his life Buarque has been unable to write a single tune that is not at the very least utterly beautiful -- not unlike his mentor Tom Jobim -- the ten new songs on Chico are customarily unimpeachable. The same verdict applies to all of the elements that make Buarque's music so maddeningly, monolithically perfect: from his immaculate arrangements to his unerring choice of musical partners, his deeply tender voice, and his brilliant songwriting, everything is in place in this succinct, melancholic, almost non-assuming collection -- only not at quite the same impossible heights. Finally, even if these (or any other!) songs may find it too hard to break into the Buarque pantheon at this point, the duet with rising star Thaís Gulin in "Se Eu Soubesse" demonstrates once again that no one writes for female singers like Chico Buarque, and the one with João Bosco in "Sinha" offers further proof of his supreme literary skills. ~ Mariano Prunes, Rovi
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Seller's Description:
New in new dust jacket. O disco com músicas inéditas de Chico Buarque traz participações de João Bosco em 'Sinhá', de Thais Gulin em 'Se eu soubesse' e Wilson das Neves em 'Sou eu', parceria de Chico e Ivan Lins. Dessa vez, Chico homenageia o Blues e a Bossa, sem esquecer o Samba."Volume 11. QUERIDO DIARIO2. RUBATO3. ESSA PEQUENA4. TIPO UM BAIAO5. SE EU SOUBESSE-PART. THAIS GULIN6. SEM VOCE Nº 27. SOU EU-PART. WILSON DAS NEVES8. NINA9. BARAFUNDA10. SINHA-PART. JOAO BOSCO.