A música é a expressão do sublime. Caminho de acesso ao melhor de nós mesmos e comunhão com os deuses; acredite-se ou não na existência deles. E quando se une à Poesia, transforma-se em canções à espera de intérpretes sensíveis para torná-las verbo e emoção. Luis Valério aproximou-se da música através da dança, praticada desde a infância e tornada profissão durante alguns anos. Seu envolvimento com a dança resultou no estabelecimento de uma relação de "artista" com a música, desde muito cedo. A música, "força que levanta os bailarinos", passou a ser um de seus "objetos de trabalho". E simultaneamente, objeto de paixão e estudo. Em 2005, após um trabalho de pesquisa e imersão na obra de nomes fundamentais da música popular brasileira e da bossa-nova, produz seu primeiro show, "Canta, canta mais", onde interpreta compositores consagrados (Tom Jobim, Chico Buarque, Fátima Guedes) e apresenta alguns nomes da música brasileira contemporânea (Adriana Calcanhoto, Carlos Rennó/Lokua kanza, Tião Carvalho...). A excelente aceitação deste espetáculo, resulta no convite para apresentações em diferentes espaços culturais em Porto Alegre, Santa Catarina e na vizinha Argentina e na participação em shows de artistas consagrados na cena músical gaúcha. E este foi só o começo! Cado Selbah.
Ahhh...
me olvidaba!
Te han dicho que tu voz tiene un aire a la de Ney Matogrosso?
Sólo que tu tienes un registro más agudo, pareces un contratenor... quizá...
Exitos!
Z.
Hey!
Yo quiero tener el demo de 'Rosa Amarela'
Cada que la oigo desde el Yotube me pongo a bailar :P
Es tan rica!
Estaré a la espera.
Besos!
Zariya
Às 18:29 em 30 janeiro 2009, Andréa Moura disse...
"Espalhe por todos a alegria que vive dentro de você.
Seja sua alegria contagiante, viva, a fim de expulsar a tristeza de todos os que o cercam.
A alegria é uma tocha de luz que deve permanecer sempre acesa, iluminando todos os nossos atos e servindo de guia aos que se chegam a nós.
Se em você houver luz e você deixar abertas as janelas de sua alma, por meio da alegria, todos os que passarem pela estrada em trevas, serão iluminadas por sua luz".
Desejo um final de semana maravilhoso, alegre e feliz.
Beijos de Felicidades da Andréa ..
Às 19:34 em 29 janeiro 2009, Andréa Moura disse...
Quero aproveitar e te convidar p/ fazer parte do Movimento Artístico Cultural Organizado, nesse movimento vc pode trocar idéias e interagir com outros artistas associados. Participe vc tb.
http://www.movimento.ning.com
Beijos !!
Oi, Luiz,
Vim conhecer seu trabalho, depois de entrar em grupos ótimos e ver que você os criou. Menino, alguma coisa temos em comum: bom gosto... hehehe.
Estou te ouvindo agora e gostando muito.
Beijos.
Às 11:38 em 26 janeiro 2009, Andréa Moura disse...
Oi Luis valério, Parabéns pela linda canção.
Beijos !!
Hoje, ao acordar, escrevi duas poesias - enviei fragmentos ao Sol, que, em meio à neblina fria da manhã em Nova York, disparava raios aquecidos amarelos-laranja. O orvalho se desfazendo em gotas nas folhas, feito esmeraldas, brilhando verde nos blues note de sonhos. Em poucos instantes, todas as palavras. E, neste momento, de um encontro tão especial, ofereço-te um troca: meus poemas por tuas claves musicais. Que tal espalhar essa alquimia entre lágrimas de harmoniosos gozos? Não, não são choros de lacrimejar. Mas uma jan session, rock shine diamante, que brilha sorrisos nos olhos, seca os lábios e embarga a voz. Não te parece uma troca perfeita? Aceito contraproposta. Mesmo que venhas rangendo os dentes, quando, de tanto calar o silêncio, herdastes a voz.
Aguardo-te!
Beijos da Silvia
Jazz vocalist Pauline Jean is a native New Yorker of Haitian descent. In 2007 Pauline graduated cum laude from the Berklee College of Music with a BM degree in Vocal Performance. After graduating from Berklee, Pauline returned to New York and immediately became actively involved in the music community. Pauline has been building on the classic art form of jazz by adding her own fresh approach. Her repertoire includes original compositions, unique arrangements of the standards, blues and traditional Afro-Haitian music fused with jazz. Her musical renditions are performed both in English and in her parents’ native tongue kreyòl. Pauline's velvety voice has a range from the low resonance and earthiness of the great Sarah Vaughan to the electrifying voltage of Nina Simone.
Her extraordinary performances have led her to share the stage with a variety of musicians such as Nina Simone’s percussionist Leopoldo Fleming, Randy Weston, Dave Valentin, Ted Curson, Terri Lyne Carrington, Ingrid Jensen, Miriam Sullivan, Luis Perdomo, Alvin Atkinson, Jr., Buyu Ambroise and Emeline Michel.
Pauline has been featured in many venues such as: Lincoln Center, United Nations, Scullers Jazz Club, St. Peter’s Church, Metropolitan Room, Kitano, Chelsea Art Museum, Zinc Bar, Minton's Playhouse, Cachaca, SOB’s, Sage Theater, Enzo’s Jazz Room and the Berklee Performance Center. She has also performed at the 2nd Annual Women in Jazz Festival, the JVC Jazz Festival-New York, the Haitian Jazz Festival and the St. Kitts-Nevis SAS Jazz Reggae Vibes Festival.
Her most recent successes include performing at the 44th International Pori Jazz Festival in Finland and a tribute to Nina Simone at The Cabaret at the Connoisseur Room in Indianapolis, where she was celebrated with standing ovations by an enthusiastic audience for three stellar performances.
Pauline released her debut CD A Musical Offering in June 2009. The album is stirring and best described as swingin’, bluesy and soulful. Musicians on this project include: Sharp Radway (piano), Corcoran Holt (bass), Alvin Atkinson, Jr. (drums), McClenty Hunter (drums), Markus Schwartz (percussion), Marcelo Woloski (percussion), Jean Caze (trumpet) and Thaddeus Hogarth (harmonica).
For more information about Pauline, please visit her website at www.paulinejean.com.
FOR BOOKING INQUIRIES PLEASE EMAIL: pauline@paulinejean.com
An established bandleader and prolific composer, idiomatically conversant with modern and traditional jazz, classical music, Brazilian choro, Argentine tango, and an expansive timeline of Afro-Cuban styles, Anat Cohen has established herself as one of the primary voices of her generation on both the tenor saxophone and clarinet since arriving in New York in 1999.
In September 2008, Anat Cohen released Notes From The Village, her fourth album as a leader. Recorded at Avatar studios in New York City, the album builds on Cohen's acclaimed 2007 releases, captures the thrilling energy of her live shows, and proves her to be an artistically adventurous writer and performer. Notes From The Village finds Anat leading a quartet of some of the most sought-after, engaging young performers in New York, including pianist Jason Lindner, bassist Omer Avital, and drummer Daniel Freedman, with accompaniment from guitarist Gilad Hekselman on three tracks. The album features compositions written by Cohen as well as her interpretations of songs by Fats Waller, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke and Ernesto Lecuona.
“In preparing for the recording,” says Anat “I really wanted to capture the free, risk-taking, open quality this band achieves when performing live. I also wanted to stretch my compositions, and arrangements.” Early responses to the album have been overwhelmingly positive; The New York Times’ Nate Chinen wrote that “Notes From The Village is a resounding confirmation; yes, she is the real deal”, DownBeat Magazine awarded the release four stars, stating that “Cohen makes it seem easy, mixing a gift for melody and an improvisational fluidity that has few peers today.” Anat’s previous outings, Noir and Poetica were released simultaneously in April 2007, inspiring a string of enthusiastic reviews. The Washington Post said that “Cohen has emerged as one of the brightest, most original young instrumentalists in jazz [...] [she] has expanded the vocabulary of jazz with a distinctive accent of her own.” The Village Voice spoke of her “Enviable insouciance” and how “she alludes to the mystical in a merry way,” and Downbeat magazine expressed the opinion that “Noir could be a classic” and “[Cohen’s] stately intonation and unforced elegance on clarinet could take her to the top.”
Anat has performed for audiences in New York’s Village Vanguard, Jazz Standard, Iridium, The Jazz Gallery, and the JVC Jazz Festival. She has also appeared at the Chicago Jazz Festival, Washington DC’s Kennedy Center, San Francisco’s Yoshi's, Boston’s Regattabar, the North Sea Jazz Festival, the Monterey Jazz Festival, and the Montreal Jazz Festival. Anat’s July 2007 engagement at the Village Vanguard in New York was a historic one; Anat is the first female reed player, and the first Israeli to headline at the club. Ms. Cohen’s accomplishments have been recognized in a flurry of awards and distinctions from critics and fans alike; She topped the Rising Star- Clarinet category in DownBeat Magazine’s critics poll in both 2007 and 2008, and placed prominently in a total of four categories including Rising Star Jazz Artist - where she ranked second and was the only female artist to make the list. Anat was also mentioned on DownBeat’s readers poll in 2007 and 2008. The Jazz Journalists Association named Anat Cohen Clarinetist of the Year by in both 2007 and 2008 – the first time in the history of the awards that an artist has earned top clarinet honors two years running. Noir and Poetica both appeared on many year-end best-of summary lists, including those of Paste magazine, The New York Sun, Slate, JazzTimes and others.
Born in Tel Aviv, Israel, Anat grew up with musical siblings; her older brother Yuval is himself a saxophonist of note, and her younger brother, Avishai, is one of New York’s busiest trumpeters. She began clarinet studies at age 12 and played jazz on clarinet for the first time in the Jaffa Conservatory’s Dixieland band. At 16, she joined the school’s big band and learned to play the tenor saxophone. The same year, Anat entered the prestigious “Thelma Yelin” High School for the Arts, where she majored in jazz. After graduation, she discharged her mandatory Israeli military service duty from 1993-95, playing tenor saxophone in the Israeli Air Force band. In 1996, Anat matriculated at Berklee College of Music in Boston. There she met faculty member Phil Wilson, who encouraged her to play clarinet, and other inspiring teachers such as Greg Hopkins, Ed Tomassi, Hal Crook, George Garzone, and Bill Pierce, and an elite international peer group of students.
During her Berklee years, Anat visited New York during breaks between semesters, making a beeline for Smalls to soak up the hybrid of grooves, world music and mainstream jazz that people like Jason Lindner and Omer Avital were then evolving. Back in Boston, she played tenor saxophone in a variety of musical contexts with various bands including Afro-Cuban, Argentinean, klezmer, contemporary Brazilian music and classical Brazilian choro. Anat also began her association with Sherrie Maricle’s top-shelf allwoman big band Diva Jazz Orchestra, which continued into the new millennium.
Once ensconced in New York, Anat quickly found work in various Brazilian ensembles like the Choro Ensemble and Duduka Da Fonseca’s Samba Jazz Quintet, and started performing with David Ostwald’s “Gully Low Jazz Band,” which explores the music of Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, Jelly Roll Morton, Sidney Bechet and their Pan-American contemporaries. Anat documented her bona fides on her debut CD, Place and Time, one of All About Jazz-New York’s “Best Debut Albums of 2005.” On the liner notes for Notes From the Village, Ira Gitler writes “She is formidable. Long may she continue to enrich the music in myriad ways.” There is every indication that her star will continue to rise for a long time to come.
Caixa de Recados (30 comentários)
Você precisa ser um membro de Jazz and Bossa para adicionar comentários!
Entrar nesta rede social
BEIJOS NA TUA ALMA!
NAMASTÊ!
GLADIS MAIA
me olvidaba!
Te han dicho que tu voz tiene un aire a la de Ney Matogrosso?
Sólo que tu tienes un registro más agudo, pareces un contratenor... quizá...
Exitos!
Z.
Yo quiero tener el demo de 'Rosa Amarela'
Cada que la oigo desde el Yotube me pongo a bailar :P
Es tan rica!
Estaré a la espera.
Besos!
Zariya
Seja sua alegria contagiante, viva, a fim de expulsar a tristeza de todos os que o cercam.
A alegria é uma tocha de luz que deve permanecer sempre acesa, iluminando todos os nossos atos e servindo de guia aos que se chegam a nós.
Se em você houver luz e você deixar abertas as janelas de sua alma, por meio da alegria, todos os que passarem pela estrada em trevas, serão iluminadas por sua luz".
Desejo um final de semana maravilhoso, alegre e feliz.
Beijos de Felicidades da Andréa ..
http://www.movimento.ning.com
Beijos !!
Vim conhecer seu trabalho, depois de entrar em grupos ótimos e ver que você os criou. Menino, alguma coisa temos em comum: bom gosto... hehehe.
Estou te ouvindo agora e gostando muito.
Beijos.
Beijos !!
Hoje, ao acordar, escrevi duas poesias - enviei fragmentos ao Sol, que, em meio à neblina fria da manhã em Nova York, disparava raios aquecidos amarelos-laranja. O orvalho se desfazendo em gotas nas folhas, feito esmeraldas, brilhando verde nos blues note de sonhos. Em poucos instantes, todas as palavras. E, neste momento, de um encontro tão especial, ofereço-te um troca: meus poemas por tuas claves musicais. Que tal espalhar essa alquimia entre lágrimas de harmoniosos gozos? Não, não são choros de lacrimejar. Mas uma jan session, rock shine diamante, que brilha sorrisos nos olhos, seca os lábios e embarga a voz. Não te parece uma troca perfeita? Aceito contraproposta. Mesmo que venhas rangendo os dentes, quando, de tanto calar o silêncio, herdastes a voz.
Aguardo-te!
Beijos da Silvia
Que a Luz de Toda a
Paz Esteja Contigo e
Com Todos os Teus ,
Por Todas as Suas Existências ...
Bjos , Cristina Araújo .
Ver todos os comentários