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Ammo Limber
64 Pieces
 
Illustrated
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The New Bossa Nova
 

The New Bossa Nova
Participated by Luciana Souza
Studio : Verve
by Verve
Release Date : 2007-08-21
Publisher : Verve
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
EAN : 0600753008737
UPC : 600753008737
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 20 reviews)

List Price : $13.98
Our Price : $9.67


Editorial Reviews for  'The New Bossa Nova'
 
Album Description
The New Bossa Nova finds Souza applying her interpretative skills to material drawn from a diverse array of sources, including Joni Mitchell ("Down To You"), Leonard Cohen ("Here It Is"), Sting ("When We Dance"), Elliott Smith ("Satellite"), Steely Dan ("Were You Blind That Day"), Brian Wilson ("God Only Knows"), Randy Newman ("Living Without You"), Michael McDonald ("I Can Let Go Now") and legendary bossa nova master Antonio Carlos Jobim (the standard "Waters of March"), along with a pair of memorable new songs written for the project, "You and the Girl," written by Souza and producer Larry Klein, and "Love Is for Strangers," by Klein and Steely Dan's Walter Becker. The set also features a memorable guest appearance by James Taylor, who joins Souza for a soulful duet reading of the Taylor composition "Never Die Young." The New Bossa Nova marks an exciting new chapter for the Brazilian-born vocalist and three-time Grammy® nominee, who's already widely acknowledged as one of jazz's most respected and accomplished vocalists. The 11-song album finds the artist crafting a fresh and highly personal variation on the beloved bossa nova style, matching Souza's exquisite, deeply-felt performances with spare, eloquent arrangements that place the emphasis squarely on the songs' timeless emotional truths.

The album confirms Souza's reputation as both a world-class vocalist and a versatile, consistently adventurous creative force. The project is Souza's first collaboration with her husband, producer/musician Klein, whose extensive resume encompasses work with artists as diverse as Joni Mitchell, Freddie Hubbard, Peter Gabriel and Wayne Shorter. The New Bossa Nova also features a stellar cast of players including tenor saxophonist Chris Potter, guitarist Romero Lubambo, pianist Edward Simon, bassist Scott Colley, vibraphonist Matt Moran and drummer Antonio Sanchez.

 
Americancivilwar.com
Brazilian bossa nova has been called the "whisper heard around the world." But when a small cadre of Rio-based intellectuals mixed American jazz with local sambas, little did they know that it would prove so durable. The initial international craze, spearheaded by Astrud Gilberto's version of "Girl from Ipanema" (Garota de Ipanema) and the movie Black Orpheus (Orfeo Negro), faded gently into a shadowy but still-beloved presence. But whenever a modern Brazilian needs a good cry in his or her cerveza, it is still to these swaying, sublimely passive-aggressive tunes that he or she will turn. Luciana Souza, a São Paulo native with three Grammy nominations under her belt, is particularly adept at performing these wistfully poetic microcosms or, as she has done here, recognizing in works by non-Brazilian composers a particular kind of restrained yet insistent longing mixed with sensual sadness and nostalgia, an emotion Brazilians call saudade. That she has located it in some very unexpected places makes the album even more magical. Her richly female, woodwind-like alto floats over a sultry, sax-infused jazz combo, transforming tunes by Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Sting, Elliot Smith, Randy Newman, and James Taylor (who sits in on his own "Never Die Young"). But the most perfect, if previously unimaginable, transformation is her take on the Beach Boys' "God Only Knows"--a startling but utterly ideal encounter. Fittingly, Souza ends the program with an English-language version of one of Antonio Carlos Jobim's most beloved songs, "Waters of March" (Águas de Março), a legendary bossa nova that brings the set full circle. --Christina Roden
 
Customer Reviews for  'The New Bossa Nova'
 
Luciana Souza's Bossa Nova
This is my first album for Luciana Souza and I am well impressed. Smooth voice; Smooth re composition for each song, James Taylor nicely adding his lovely voice on "Never die Young"; This album is a bouquet of nice songs of Sting, James Taylor, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen. Brazilian Bossa Nova? No.
Bossa Nova Luciana Souza's style? Absolutely.
Highly recommended for all the smooth Jazz, Smooth Rock and Bossa Nova lovers, who are into some great music, composed by all the artists I mentioned above, played, twisted and sang in an absolutely lovely and charming way.
4 stars or 5 are well deserved.
Other well recommended album of a similar great style:
Joni Mitchell: Turbulent Indigo
Joni Mitchell: Taming the Tiger
 
A very cool mix.
Bossa nova has been in Luciana Souza's blood since she was a child growing up in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in the early '60s as the daughter of two of its innovators, Walter Santos and Tereza Sousa.
So, after six critically acclaimed albums where her expansive, homegrown Brazilian musical vocabulary converged with American jazz, the three-time Grammy Award-nominated Los Angeles-based vocalist returns to the wellspring and explores bossa nova from a different slant on "The New Bossa Nova," produced by her husband, jazz musician/producer Larry Klein"(D.Quellette-Reuters).
"The New Bossa Nova" marks an exciting new chapter for the Brazilian-born vocalist and three-time Grammy nominee, who's already widely acknowledged as one of jazz's most respected and accomplished vocalists.
The 12-song album finds the artist crafting a fresh and highly personal variation on the beloved bossa nova style.
Luciana Souza's CD, which translates fully as 'the new new groove', is a reminder of how much bossa nova lies embedded inside a whole strain of contemporary American music, as in the first two songs, by Joni Mitchell and James Taylor respectively.
In the first, "Down To You", she sounds remarkably like Joni Mitchell, or maybe it's because Mitchell's jazz phrasing is actually more akin to Brazilian.
The same is true for James Taylor's "Never Die Young", which features the American singer/songwriter, who joins Souza for a soulful duet reading of his song.
In this context, James Taylor's relaxed vocals sound like so much Musica Popular Brasiliera.
The rest is material from composers from Randy Newman to Leonard Cohen, Sting, and the godfather of bossa nova, Antonio Carlos Jobim. In this spirit, the Brazilian-born Souza manages to sound true to both her birthplace and the United States, where she currently lives.
Her well-trained voice is comfortable with all idioms, backed by a tight Brazilian jazz combo. There is a new new groove abroad, which is to say, at home.
The resulting album confirms Souza's reputation as both a world-class vocalist and a versatile, consistently adventurous creative force.
The project is Souza's first collaboration with her husband, producer/musician Klein, whose extensive resume encompasses work with artists as diverse as Joni Mitchell, Madeleine Peyroux, Freddie Hubbard, Peter Gabriel and Wayne Shorter.
"The New Bossa Nova" also features a stellar cast of players including tenor saxophonist Chris Potter, guitarist Romero Lubambo, pianist Edward Simon, bassist Scott Colley, vibraphonist Matt Moran and drummer Antonio Sanchez.
My favourite tracks : "Never Die Young", "Down to You" and "Waters of March".
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Much Better Live.
I just saw Luciana perform some songs from this album last night and of course the CD just doesn't do them justice. I was not familiar with her music and checked out some of her music here on Americancivilwar before deciding to go to the concert. I loved the traditional Bossa Nova songs she sings in Portuguese, but I was a little skeptical because the focus for the concert were the songs from this CD which are in English and quite frankly sound a little boring and dry when listening to the CD; even though she tries to bring that Bossa Nova flavor into them. She is a wonderful talent, but the music on this CD is one better experienced in a live concert.
 
Very nice bossa nova interpretations of pop rock tunes
Luciana Souza and producer Larry Klein have taken an interesting collection of (mostly) pop rock tunes and applied a jazzy bossa styling with great depth and feel. In my opinion, this is exactly how cover records should be. Always endeavor to stretch the original rendition into new musical territory.

As an avid Steely Dan fan, it was a great joy to hear "Third World Man" interpreted with previously unused Becker/Fagen lyrics (re-titled here as "Were You Blind That Day"). Just awesome.

I'm not a huge fan of vocal jazz but Luciana is very talented vocalist. This album was very well engineered and sounds fantastic.
 
brief review

It was OK, but a little too pop for me. I was looking for more challenging in Brazilian music.
 
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