Portugal Former FC Porto president Pinto da Costa dies aged 87
João Gilberto. [Picture: Social Media]
Joao Gilberto, a Brazilian singer, guitarist and songwriter considered one of the fathers of the bossa nova genre that gained global popularity in the 1960s and became an iconic sound of the South American nation, died Saturday, his son said. He was 88.
Joao Marcelo said his father had been battling health issues though no official cause of death was given. “His struggle was noble. He tried to maintain his dignity in the light of losing his sovereignty,” Marcelo posted on Facebook.
A fusion of samba and jazz, bossa nova emerged in the late 1950 and gained a worldwide following in the 1960s, pioneered by Gilberto and Antonio Carlos Jobim, who composed the iconic Girl From Ipanema that was sung by Gilberto, his wife Astrud Gilberto and others.
In 1961, Gilberto finished the trilogy of albums that would make bossa nova known around the world: “Chega de Saudade,” ”El Amor, La Sonrisa y La Flor,” and “Joao Gilberto.”
His 1964 album Getz/Gilberto with U.S. saxophonist Stan Getz sold millions of copies and popularised bossa nova. Over his career he won two Grammy awards and was nominated for six.
“It was Joao Gilberto, the greatest genius of Brazilian music, who was the definitive influence on my music,” singer Gal Costa wrote on social media. “He will be missed but his legacy is very important to Brazil and to the world.”
Born in Bahia in northeastern Brazil, he moved to Rio de Janeiro at a young age. Gilberto was influenced by U.S. jazz greats and recorded songs in the United States where he lived for much of the 1960s and 1970.
Journalist and bossa nova scholar Ruy Castro called the death of Gilberto a “monumental” loss.
Castro wrote in his book “The Wave that Built in the Sea” that Gilberto loved soccer and was a fan of the Fluminense club, whose games he liked to watch with a guitar in his hands.
“He managed to create a mystique about him abroad, being who he was and not even speaking English,” he told the Globo television station.
The musician had spent his final years wrapped in legal troubles and debts. His last live performance was in 2008 and he cancelled a commemorative show to mark his 80th year because of health problems.
With little interest in giving interviews, he’d become known as the “reclusive genius” in the streets of Leblón, the neighbourhood in a southern part where he lived but was seldom seen.
He is survived by three children.
Singer Daniela Mercury called Gilberto a “genius who revolutionised popular Brazilian music. He taught us now to sing in the most beautify way in the world.”
“Go in peace, maestro,” she wrote.
By Marcelo de Silva Sousa
João Gilberto, father of #BossaNova, has passed way.
Today, during the 43rd session of #WorldHeritage Committee in Baku, @UNESCO paid tribute to his legacy with a minute of silence.
ℹhttps://t.co/FZJQSrWb7M #43WHC @UNESCOCourier pic.twitter.com/JTYUCycaf9
— UNESCO (@UNESCO) July 7, 2019
João Gilberto, legendary Brazilian musician and Bossa Nova pioneer, died Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.
He was 88 years old. RIP. ?https://t.co/gX1NOuP0GBpic.twitter.com/5kiPKqh1iX
— Complex (@Complex) July 6, 2019
RIP João Gilberto. Sua música está em nossos corações para sempre ❤️https://t.co/l83aFp2UJS
— tre murillo (@treelzebub) July 7, 2019
João Gilberto – Eu Sei Que Vou Te Amar – São Paulo – 1994 https://t.co/6NM33xa4C6
— João José Marques (@joaojosemarques) July 7, 2019
“He could read a newspaper and sound good.”—Miles Davis https://t.co/NnpF6hD3ey
— charles perry (@cwperov) July 7, 2019
Want to start a quiet revolution? Put these three musicians in the same room and watch what happens.
Antonio Carlos Jobim, Stan Getz, João Gilberto—all of them now gone. But what a sound and legacy! pic.twitter.com/fuJ4bDdmZ4
— Ted Gioia (@tedgioia) July 6, 2019
“falem baixo por favor…”
?: Leo Aversa/O Globo pic.twitter.com/j22CnwkqWf
— Adriana Calcanhotto (@lacalcanhotto) July 6, 2019
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