Eliane Elias
(born March 19, 1960 in São Paulo, Brazil) is a Brazilian jazz pianist,
singer, arranger and songwriter. Pianist/singer/songwriter Eliane Elias
is known for her distinctive and immediately recognizable musical style
which blends her Brazilian roots and her sensuous, alluring voice with
her impressive instrumental jazz, classical and compositional skills.
Born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Elias’ musical talents began to show at an
early age. She started studying piano at age seven, and at age twelve
was transcribing solos from the great jazz masters. By the time she was
fifteen, she was teaching piano and improvisation at one of Brazil’s
most prestigious schools of music. Her performing career began in Brazil
at age seventeen, working with Brazilian singer/songwriter Toquinho and
the great poet Vinicius de Moraes, who was also Antonio Carlos Jobim’s
co-writer/lyricist. In 1981, she headed for New York and in 1982 landed a
spot in the acclaimed group Steps Ahead.
Her first album release was a collaboration with Randy Brecker entitled
Amanda in 1984. Shortly thereafter her solo career began, spanning over
twenty albums to date. In her work Elias has documented dozens of her
own compositions, her outstanding piano playing and arranging, and
beautiful vocal interpretations. All of her recordings have garnered a
great deal of praise from the critics and all have topped the Billboard
and jazz radio charts. In 1988 she was voted Best New Talent in the
Critics Poll of Jazziz magazine. Together with Herbie Hancock, she was
nominated for a GRAMMY® in the “Best Jazz Solo Performance” category for
her 1995 release, Solos and Duets. This recording was hailed by
Musician magazine as “a landmark in piano duo history.” In the 1997
Downbeat Readers Poll, her recording The Three Americas was voted Best
Jazz Album. Elias was also named in five other categories: Beyond
Musician, Best Composer, Jazz Pianist, Female Vocalist, and Musician of
the Year. Considered one of the great interpreters of Jobim’s music,
Elias has recorded two albums solely dedicated to the works of the
composer, Plays Jobim and Sings Jobim. Her 1998 release Eliane Elias
Sings Jobim won Best Vocal Album in Japan, was the number one record on
Japan’s charts for over three months and was awarded Best Brazilian
Album in the Jazziz Critics Poll.
Moreover, as a testament to the quality of her writing, the renowned
Danish Radio Big Band has performed and recorded Elias’ compositions,
arranged and conducted by the legendary Bob Brookmeyer. The CD recording
of this project is called Impulsive and was released on Stunt Records.
It received a GRAMMY® nomination for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album in
2001. The same year, Calle 54, the highly acclaimed documentary film by
Oscar-winning Spanish director Fernando Trueba, featured Elias’
performance of “Samba Triste” and also received a GRAMMY® nomination for
Best Latin Jazz Album. On the Classical Side, recorded in 1993,
demonstrated Elias’ classical skills with a program of Bach, Ravel, and
Villa Lobos. In 2002, Elias recorded with opera sensation Denyce Graves.
For this recording, The Lost Days, she arranged two Brazilian classical
pieces and wrote an original composition especially for Graves entitled
“HaabiaTupi.” In 2002, Elias signed to the RCA Music Group/Bluebird
label and released Kissed by Nature, an album consisting of mostly
original compositions. Dreamer, her second recording for the label
(released in 2004), was a fresh mix of tunes from the American Songbook,
Brazilian Bossa Novas, and two new originals, all sung in English and
Portuguese and supported by a full orchestra. Dreamer received the Gold
Disc Award and was voted Best Vocal Album in Japan in 2004. It reached
No. 3 on the pop charts in France and No. 4 on the Billboard charts in
the U.S.
Elias’ Around The City, released on RCA Victor in August 2006, merges
bits of Bossa Nova, with shades of pop, jazz, Latin and even rock &
roll. Around The City features Elias’ vocals and songwriting in
collaborations with producers Andres Levin and Lester Mendez, as well as
fresh takes on pop classics such as Tito Puente’s “Oye Como Va” and Bob
Marley’s “Jammin”. Elias returned to Blue Note/ EMI in 2007 with
Something For You, a tribute to the music of the late great Bill Evans.
While touching the essence of the pianist/composer, she also brings her
own unique gifts to the surface, as a composer, interpreter, outstanding
instrumentalist and beguiling vocalist. This release won Best Vocal
Album of the Year and the Gold Disc Award in Japan. This is also the
third consecutive recording of Elias to receive these awards and her
fourth overall. Something for You reached No. 1 on the U.S. Jazz Radio
charts, No. 8 on Billboard and No. 2 on the French Jazz Charts. 2008
marked the fiftieth anniversary of the birth of Bossa Nova. In
celebration of this event, Elias recorded Bossa Nova Stories, featuring
some of the landmark songs of Brazil with American classic and pop
standards, exquisitely performed as only she can, with lush romantic
vocals and exciting playing accompanied by a stellar rhythm section and
strings recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London.
Destined to become a classic, Bossa Nova Stories achieved the following:
Debuted at No. 1 on the French Charts (2008), No. 1 Vocal Album from
Swing Journal, Japan (May-June 2008), No. 1 iTunes Top Jazz Album
(January 2009), No. 2 iTunes Top Latin Album (January 2009), debuted at
No. 2 on Billboard’s Overall and Top Jazz Charts (January 2009). Bossa
Nova Stories was also nominated by the Brazilian GRAMMYs (20th Premio da
Musica Brasileira, 2009) for Best Foreign Album. In 2009, EMI Japan
released Eliane Elias Plays Live, an all-instrumental trio album with
bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Joey Baron of a concert recorded in
Amsterdam May 31, 2002. This performance demonstrates modern jazz trio
playing at the highest level and spotlight Elias’s inventiveness and
supreme command of the instrument on a collection of jazz standards and
one original. Light My Fire, released May 31, 2011, on Concord Picante, a
division of Concord Music Group, features four compositions written or
co-written by Elias herself and also includes covers of familiar works
by songwriters as diverse as Jim Morrison and the Doors, pop icon Stevie
Wonder and jazz saxophonist Paul Desmond. Backing Elias is a crew of
twelve high-caliber players, including special guests such as
guitarist/vocalist Gilberto Gil and trumpeter Randy Brecker. On Light My
Fire, Elias wears many hats – as singer, pianist, composer, arranger
and producer. In September 2011, her song “What about the Heart (Bate
Bate)” was nominated for a Latin GRAMMY® in the category of Best
Brazilian Song.
Elias’ 2013 release I Thought About You (A Tribute To Chet Baker)
reached #1 on USA and France Amazon.com, #2 on itunes USA, France and
Brazil and #4 on Billboard Jazz Charts. It offers her personalized spin
on her connection to the singer-instrumentalist tradition and arrives
with a statement of purpose: jazz repertoire can sound totally fresh
when delivered with ingenuity and passion. There’s no question about it:
Five time GRAMMY® Award Nominee, four time “Gold Disc Award” recipient
and three time winner of “Best Vocal Album” in Japan, #1 artist in sales
and radio in France, with all recordings reaching top five on Billboard
Magazine, jazz radio charts and itunes to name a few accolades, Eliane
Elias has taken her place in the pantheon of music giants. With 23
albums to date demonstrating her unique gifts as a pianist, singer,
composer and arranger as well as melding her immense talents in jazz,
pop, classical and Brazilian music, Eliane Elias is as Jazziz magazine
has called her, “A citizen of the world” and “an artist beyond
category.”