Caetano Veloso life and biography

Caetano Veloso picture, image, poster

Caetano Veloso biography

Date of birth : 1942-08-07
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Bahia, Brazil
Nationality : Brazilian
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2012-03-05
Credited as : Singer-songwriter, Composer, political activist

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Caetano Emanuel Viana Teles Veloso, better known as Caetano Veloso, is a Brazilian composer, singer, guitarist, writer, and political activist. Veloso first became known for his participation in the Brazilian musical movement Tropicalismo which encompassed theatre, poetry and music in the 1960s, at the beginning of the Brazilian military dictatorship. He has remained a constant creative influence and best-selling performing artist and composer ever since.

Since the 1960s, Caetano Veloso has been a dominant force in contemporary Brazilian music, helping to shape his nation's popular music. A pop musician whose stature is on par with or has exceeded that of Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, John Lennon, and Paul McCartney, Veloso matured during the 1980s and 1990s into a Brazilian renaissance man: a poet, writer, and painter as well as a revered musician.
"One might theorize that Caetano is the great pop singer America never had," explained Ben Ratliff in Spin magazine in June of 1999. "Who in our country combines actual poetry, rigorous with wordplay and fantastic imagery, with a responsible accounting of natural history? (Not Bruce Springsteen.) Who puts sensual pleasure within an intellectual framework? (Not Madonna.) Who maintains a public complexity on issues of race and sexuality but remains engaged with the press and his fans? (Not the Artist Formerly Known as Prince.) Who's a middle-age pop musician routinely interviewed on highbrow television programs, quoted by his country's current president during his nomination-acceptance speech, and studied by academics? (Not Garth Brooks.) Who's an avant-gardist, a political maverick, a sex symbol, a singer fully convincing with a full band or just alone with a guitar? (Not Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, or Puffy.) Who's a national hero--not just for specific racial, generational, and economic subsets, but for everyone? In our nation, sadly, Caetano has no equal."

Born in 1942 in Santo Amaro da Purifica o in Brazil's Bahia region, Veloso absorbed a rich Bahian musical heritage that was influenced by Caribbean, African, and North American pop music. Nevertheless, it was the cool, seductive bossa nova sound of Joao Gilberto, a Brazilian superstar in the 1950s, that would later serve as the foundation for Veloso's own intense, eclectic pop. In 1960, he moved from his hometown to Salvador in order to attend high school, and in 1963, Veloso entered the Federal University of Bahia as a philosophy student. During this time, Brazil experienced a cultural explosion in art, political thought, and music. Bossa nova, a revolutionary new musical style that combined thoughtful lyricism with subtle rhythm, became an important aspect of Brazilian modernism.

Inspired like many young Brazilians by the movement, Veloso started writing criticism for the local newspaper, acting in avant-garde theater, and singing bossa nova in bars. Following his sister Maria Bethnia-- a very successful singer in her own right--to Rio de Janeiro so she could act in a stage play in the mid-1960s, the 23-year-old Veloso initiated his own career by winning a lyric writing contest with his song "Um Dia" and was quickly signed to the Phillips label. His music career began in earnest in 1965 when he started recording in Rio, and by 1966, he was competing in televised music festivals with great success.

Soon, Veloso, along with other Brazilian stars such as Gal Costa and Gilberto Gil (a longtime friend and artistic collaborator whom Veloso had met in Salvador in 1963) represented the new wave of Msica Popular Brasileira (or MPB), the all-purpose term used by Brazilians to describe their pop music. Intelligent, ambitious, creative, and given to an unapologetic leftist political outlook, Veloso would soon become a controversial figure in Brazilian pop. By 1967, he had aligned himself with Brazil's burgeoning hippie movement, and, along with Gil, created a new form of pop music dubbed by artist Helio Oiticica as Tropicalismo. That same year, Veloso released his first album, Domingo, recorded with Costa in 1966. Arty and eclectic, Tropicalismo retained a bossa nova influence, but added elements of folk-rock and art-rock to a mixture of loud electric guitars, poetic spoken-word sections, and jazz-like dissonance.

Although not well-received at first by traditional pop-loving Brazilians--both Veloso and Gil faced the wrath of former fans--Tropicalismo was nonetheless a breathtaking stylistic synthesis that signaled a new generation of daring, provocative, and politically outspoken musicians who would remake the face of MPB. "We were fascinated by advances in technology," Veloso declared, as quoted by Ratliff, "and we were also interested in the death of sexual hypocrisy, not a usual aim of leftist movements. We put new rock'n'roll together with tango from Argentina, music from the brothels in Brazil, and very raw music from the Northeast, the backlands. We could be ambiguous sexually. Communists never liked gays much. But we did."

However, such a cultural shift also entailed considerable dangers. Since 1964, Brazil had been ruled by a military dictatorship, a government that would continue to hold power for 20 years, that did not look kindly upon such radical music made by such radical musicians. Almost immediately, those in power initiated government-sanctioned attempts to circumscribe the recordings and live performances of many Tropicalistas. Censorship of song lyrics, not to mention radio and television play lists (Veloso had become a television performer on Brazilian variety shows) occurred on a regular basis. Moreover, officials set out to persecute performers who criticized the government, and Veloso and Gil topped the dictatorship's hit list. Both men spent two months in prison for "anti-government activity" and another four months under house arrest. After a defiant 1968 performance together, Veloso and Gil were forced into exile in London in 1969. "Although it did not feel good to leave Brazil, London was a very interesting place to be in 1969," he recalled to Don Heckman of Rhythm in 1999. Veloso continued to record abroad and write songs for other Tropicalismo stars, but he would not receive permission to return to Brazil permanently until 1972.

Although his commitment to politicized art never wavered, Veloso, over the next 20 years, transformed from being a very popular Brazilian singer/songwriter to standing at the center of Brazilian pop. He maintained a grueling pace of recording, producing, and performing. In the mid-1970s, Veloso added writing to his resume, publishing a book of articles, poems and song lyrics covering a period from 1965 to 1976 entitled Algeria, Algeria--also the title of his first noted hit song. In the 1980s, Veloso's popularity began to spread beyond the borders of Brazil. He toured in Africa, Paris, and Israel; interviewed the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger for Brazilian television; and in 1983, playing in the United States for the first time at the age of 41, sold out three nights at the Public Theater in New York City, performances that earned stellar reviews from New York Times pop critic Robert Palmer. This steady increase in popularity occurred despite the fact that Veloso's records were extremely hard to find in American record stores.

However, Veloso never seemed bothered by his low profile outside of Brazil. His work over the years, even after he became a more well-known international pop figure, remained challenging and intriguing, and Veloso refused to modify his style to suit other cultural (including American) tastes--he sang in English (most of his recorded work was performed in the Portuguese language) only when he felt like it, not because he wanted sell more records to American listeners. And while Veloso gained recognition in the years following his exile throughout the world, he nevertheless opted to focus on his own country. "I've always thought that what I do could only interest Brazilians," he humbly explained to Ratliff. "For two reasons: because of the words, and because of the knowledge of our history and our problems. Outside of that, I couldn't see any appeal in my work." Likewise, Veloso developed relationships with several trend-setting New York musicians, such as Brazilian native Arto Lindsay and David Byrne, but he never made a big deal about it. Rather, Veloso stood as one of the rare musicians who, despite his superstar status and substantial record sales (at least in Brazil), did not become self-aggrandizing, narcissistic, or overly concerned with his hipness.

In his later years, Veloso showed no signs of slowing down. After his 1989 recording Estrangeiro, produced by Arto Lindsay of the Ambitious Lovers and Peter Scherer, became his first non-import release in America, Veloso's profile in the United States increased significantly. He continued to attract American listeners with the release of 1993's Tropicalia 2. Recorded with Gil, the album was considered brilliant by the music press and made numerous American "ten-best" lists that year. Another effort, 1994's Spanish-language album Fina Estampa, won considerable praise as well. The 15-song compilation contained "Latin American songs that I like very much, that I had known since childhood," Veloso told John Lannert of Billboard magazine.

Other non-import albums, including 1992's Circulado and 1997's Circulado Vivo--which included versions of Michael Jackson's "Black and White" and Dylan's "Jokerman"--also fared well in the United States, leading the pop star, in the summer of 1997, to embark on his largest American tour up to that time. In 1999, Veloso returned with Livro, originally released in Europe in late 1998, which was selected by critics for both the New York Times and the Village Voice as one of the best albums of the year. Peter Watrous of the New York Times, for example, described the record as "wildly intelligent and sensual, and perfectly produced, moving from orchestral works to minimalist ballads and Brazilian drum workouts."

That same year, Veloso completed a memoir of his involvement in the Tropicalismo movement of the 1960s, as well as Brazilian music and culture, entitled Verdade Tropical, which was published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf. In 1999 at the age of 56, Veloso continued to live in Brazil with his second wife and manager, Paula Lavigne, and their son Zeca.

In 2011, he again contributed two songs to the Red Hot Organization's most recent compilation album, "Red Hot + Rio 2." The two tracks include Terra (Prefuse 73 '3 Mellotrons In A Quiet Room' Version) and Dreamworld: Marco de Canaveses, in collaboration with David Byrne.

His September 2006 album, Cê, was released by Nonesuch Records in the United States. It won two Latin Grammy Awards, one for best singer-songwriter and one for Best Portuguese Song, "Não Me Arrependo". With a total of five Latin Grammys, Veloso has received more than any other Brazilian performer.

Veloso has been called "one of the greatest songwriters of the century" and "a pop musician/poet/filmmaker/political activist whose stature in the pantheon of international pop musicians is on a par with that of Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, and Lennon/McCartney".Veloso has won five Latin Grammy Awards.

Studio albums:
1967: Domingo
1968: Caetano Veloso
1968: Tropicália: ou Panis et Circenses
1968: Veloso, Gil e Bethania
1969: Caetano Veloso
1971: Caetano Veloso
1972: Transa
1972: Araçá Azul
1975: Jóia
1975: Qualquer Coisa
1977: Bicho
1977: Caetano... muitos carnavais...
1978: Muito (dentro da estrela azulada)
1979: Cinema Transcendental
1981: Outras Palavras
1981: Brasil
1982: Cores, Nomes
1983: Uns
1984: Velô
1986: Caetano Veloso
1987: Caetano
1989: Estrangeiro
1991: Circuladô
1993: Tropicália 2 (with Gilberto Gil)
1994: Fina Estampa
1998: Livro
2000: Noites do Norte
2002: Eu não peço desculpas (with Jorge Mautner)
2004: A Foreign Sound
2005: Onqotô
2006: Cê
2008: Caetano Veloso e Roberto Carlos - e a música de Tom Jobim
2009: Zii e Zie

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