Vinicius Cantuária
(born April 29, 1951) is a Brazilian singer, songwriter, guitarist,
drummer and percussionist. He is associated with Bossa nova and
Brazilian jazz. Originally from the Amazonian city of Manaus, Cantuária
grew up in Rio and relocated to New York City in the mid-1990s. His
career spans several zones of Brazilian music: he founded the Brazilian
rock group O Terço in the 1970s, released six solo albums in Brazil in
the 1980s that include his hit songs "Só Você" and "Lua e Estrela" and
pioneered the world of neo-Brazilian music with his first international
release Sol Na Cara in 1996. Since moving to the United States,
Cantuária has been a leading figure in the downtown New York Jazz and
contemporary music scenes. His albums, always critics' favorites, have
featured collaborations with Arto Lindsay, Bill Frisell, Brian Eno,
Laurie Anderson, Brad Mehldau, Marc Ribot, David Byrne and Ryuichi
Sakamoto. In 1998, Cantuária contributed the song "Luz de Candeiro" to
the AIDS benefit compilation album Onda Sonora: Red Hot + Lisbon
produced by the Red Hot Organization. Cantuária also produces various
other artists, such as the successful debut album of Aline de Lima in
2006, also from the French Naïve label, which released his Cymbals
album.
Born in Manaus, Amazonas, he grew up in Rio de Janeiro, and after
several successful records, he moved to New York in the mid-90s. He has
proved himself in a number of fields, directly or indirectly linked to
Brazilian music. Leader of the rock band “O Terco”, he released six
albums in Brazil in the 80s and with his album “Sol na Cara”
(Grammavision), was a pioneer of the neo-Brazilian music in 1996. He
then became one of the most important downtown New York figures,
multiplying collaborations with artists as eclectic as Brian Eno, Laurie
Anderson, Brad Mehldau, Arto Lindsay
As a composer, Cantuaria has had many successes, with “Lua e Estrela”
(recorded by Caetano Veloso in 1981), “Coisa Linda,” “So Você,” and “Na
Cançao”; as a sideman, he has performed with Caetano Veloso, Chico
Buarque, to only name a few.
In New York, he has released five internationally recognized studio
albums “Sol Na Cara”, “Ê“,”ÊVinicius”, “Horse & fish”, “” and signed
an artist contract with Naïve in 2008 which released his album
“Cymbals”, recorded with top New York musicians, Brad Mehldau, Michael
Leonhardt, Dave Binney, and Erik Frielander… Keeping his New York
musicians for «ÊSamba cariocaÊ» (2010), Vinicius Cantuaria successfully
returned to his Brazilian roots which once again proved to be numerous.
Indeed, in addition to his usual New York team (Brad Mehldau, Bill
Frisell), Vinicius was this time surrounded by an impressive line-up of
Brazilian musicians from all trends and different backgrounds : Arto
Lindsay, who produced the album, veterans like Joao Donato or Marcos
Valle, and younger musicians, like Dadi or Sidinho.
Vinicius, who owns his studio in New York and frequently travels to
Brazil, works every day and progresses in small steps, hence the
impression of a simple, melodic, and obvious music, yet so
sophisticated.
2011 saw the release of the brilliant and multi-rewarded album
«ÊLagrimas MexicanasÊ», a duet with Bill Frisell. Skillfully crafted
over more than five years by two long-time collaborators, this
magnificent album clearly revealed itself as a marvel of elegance,
musicality, and purity, recommended to the widest audience, which was
quickly captured.
With «ÊIndio De ApartamentoÊ» (Indian in the Apartment – 2012), his
newest album, he confirms this trend and goes even further in brevity
and purity, while maintaining an exemplary singularity towards Bossa
Nova world. Dedicated to the memory of his mother, who died last year,
this solumn and serious album, continues the trend started with “Samba
Carioca”, blending New York/cosmopolitain musicians (Bill Frisell,
Ryuichi Sakamoto) with Brazilian ones (Dadi, Limihna) while subjecting
them to record increasingly varied and different compositions.
Certainly more compact, dense, tighter and pure, sometimes minimalist
like in the wonderful “Purus” where Vinicius performs at the same time
vocals, guitar, keyboard and loops, this album is almost open to variety
with the presence of Norah Jones on piano, the very beautiful “Pe Na
Estrada” a duet with Bill Frisell, but especially in “This Time”, a
brilliant duet with Jesse Harris (Once Blue, Norah Jones….), perfect for
radios, and which illuminates this album with the sparkle of diamonds.
According to Vinicius, Indio de Apartamento “came about from the mix of
the raw sound from guitars, acoustic piano, percussion and voice with
the electronic sound from computers. These two sonoric mixes together
with the harmonies, melodies and lyrics created a
unique-Brazilian-universal atmosphere”.
Again, the result is a magnificent album, of incredible subtlety and
full of contrasts, of great unity and remarkable diversity, with a pure
and completed classicism. Almost a classic, in a modern world.