Born on July 1, 1967, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; daughter of Carlos Monte (a musician). Education: Attended National Music School, Rio de Janeiro, c. 1980s; studied bel canto in Italy, 1985.
Performed with friends as a teenager; started a business making and selling jewelry and accessories; released debut album, MM: Marisa Monte Live, 1988; signed with Metro Blue Records, 1994; formed own record label, Phonomotor, 2000; released Todo Azul, 2000.
Awards: Premio Multishow de Musica Brasileira Awards, Best Album for Memories, Chronicles, and Declarations of Love, and Best Female Singer, both 2001.
Addresses:Management—Leonardo Netto, Travess Santa Leocadia 40, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Publisher—Monte Songs, Praia do Flamengo 200/15°, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Record company—Phonomotor, Monte Ciraçao e Produçao Itda., Travessa Santa Leocadia 40, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; EMI Music, Rua Mena Barreto 151, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Singer, songwriter
Although some journalists have called her the Madonna of Brazil, Marisa Monte (pronounced "Mown-chee") has a diverse and eclectic style that goes beyond being purely pop. Her repertoire extends from traditional choro (a uniquely Brazilian form of music from the early twentieth century), to samba, jazz, rock, reggae, funk, and tropicalia, a type of Brazilian popular music from the mid-1960s. On the other hand, Monte doesn’t deny that she is popular and that she embraces Brazil’s popular music. Also like Madonna, Monte is in complete control of her career, her music, and her future. She actively explores diverse Brazilian styles as well as those from around the world. As she told Bob Young of the Boston Herald, "To talk about Brazilian music is to talk about mixing, about diversity, about variety." Monte’s repertoire is representative of that mixing, diversity, and variety.
Born on July 1, 1967, in Rio de Janeiro, to a musician and a homemaker, Monte grew up in Urca, Rio de Janeiro with her sisters Leticia and Livia. Her father, Carlos Monte, was a director of the traditional samba group Portela, in the early 1970s, and Monte grew up with music in her home. As her father got older, there was less music in the house, but Monte had already learned an appreciation for the previous generation’s style of music. Her mother taught Marisa sewing, and Monte used this skill during her teens to create a line of jewelry and accessories she sold to boutiques throughout her neighborhood. She continued to work in this business until she began to dedicate herself full-time to music.
Began Serious Musical Study Growing up Monte studied singing, piano, and drums. She admired opera singer Maria Callas and jazz singer Billie Holiday. She studied locally at the National School of Music in Rio de Janeiro, hoping to build her voice and make it stronger in a more classical mode. At the same time she performed popular music with her friends at clubs throughout Rio. When Monte was 16 representatives from PolyGram offered her a recording contract. She turned the offer down because she had already made plans to go to Italy.
At age 18, Monte traveled to Italy to study bel canto seriously. The year and a half she spent there distanced her from her country’s culture and allowed her to gain a new respect for the scope of Brazilian music. She told Enor Paiano and John Lanner of Billboard, "I was studying bel canto … but people kept telling me to sing Brazilian music in the nightclubs, and I thought, These people grew up listening to the opera. I’ll never sing like them; I have to search for my own roots." The voice training she was doing in Italy was useful, but she realized a few things about opera that she didn’t think would work for her. She related to Young, "I love opera, but I don’t think I would be satisfied with it as an artistic expression. It’s kind of out of the contemporary
production. It doesn’t really talk about our days. It turns to the past."
Focused on Personal Musical Roots Monte returned to Brazil with a new outlook. She began performing live again as she had before she left. She also began researching music of all genres including traditional Brazilian music, but also other music including the songs of German composer Kurt Weil and Motown artist Marvin Gaye. With the help of Nelson Motta, a journalist and friend of her mother, Monte began to book more and larger shows. Her first really large performance was one that included a group of her favorite songs. A year later she was asked to perform for a television special.
The performance Monte gave for television was recorded by EMI/Odeon and released in 1988 as MM: Marisa Monte Live. This was Monte’s first album, and was only released in Brazil, where it went platinum. For her second album she worked with New York producer Arto Lindsey. Brazilian born, Lindsay cultivated a wide range of friends in the city’s jazz and avant garde community. He brought in several of his friends to contribute to Monte’s second album, Mais, which was released in 1991 and went platinum in Brazil while also selling well in the United States.
In 1994 Monte signed a record contract with Metro Blue, a division of Blue Note Records. For her first release with them, Rose and Charcoal, she signed on Lindsay as producer. He again provided New York talent to perform with Monte, performance artist/composer Laurie Anderson among others. In addition to this New York contingent, Monte performed with guitarist Gilberto Gil of the tropicalia movement and singer Paulinho de Viola, a samba purist. American composer Philip Glass also added to the album by contributing to the brass and string arrangements for the song "Ao Meu Redor." In 1996 Monte release A Great Noise, which showcased cover art by underground comic artist Carlos Zefiro.
Built International Following through Tours In between albums, Monte mounted extensive tours that traveled the world. She believes her stage shows are the most important part of her music, and her performances sometimes contain elaborate light and projection shows. Despite these elaborate stagings she is capable of building a rapport with even large crowds. Not a dancer, Monte depends on the control she has of her voice and her idiosyncratic hand movements to maintain her audience’s attention. As Los Angeles Daily News contributor Rob Lowman commented after attending a performance by the Brazilian vocalist, "Monte demonstrated an effortless vocal style, seeming to be able to go from a whisper to a shout and then back into something airy without taking a breath."
In 2000 Monte signed a contract that gave her unprecedented control over her product. The new agreement with EMI allowed the singer’s own label, Phonomotor, to continue pressing and distributing her first four albums. The agreement also gave her complete artistic control, forbidding EMI from interfering with any of Phonomotor’s content. At the time of her new contract, Monte also released another album, Memories, Chronicles, and Declarations of Love, which is less experimental than Monte’s early work.
Seeking to extend her range beyond singer, guitarist, and composer, Monte produced a record for Phonomotor with the Velha Guarda da Portela (the Old Guard of Portela). She worked with the elderly performers of classic samba to record works, thus making a contribution to the archives of traditional Brazilian music. Of her ventures into production, she told Bruce Oilman of Brazzil, "I envision it as a very restrictive independent label that allows me to produce whatever I want… Phonomotor is something very chained to my work. When you see Phonomotor, you’ll see Marisa Monte." The same goes for all of Monte’s work. She is dedicated to her craft and to expressing herself as well as preserving that which is distinctively Brazilian.
Selected discography MM: Marisa Monte Live, EMI/Odeon, 1988. Mais, EMI/Odeon, 1991. Rose and Charcoal, Metro Blue, 1994. A Great Noise, Metro Blue, 1996. Memories, Chronicles, and Declarations of Love, EMI, 2000.
Sources Periodicals Billboard, September 24, 1994, p. 10. Boston Herald, September 30, 2000, p. 19. Brazzil, October 2000. Daily News (Los Angeles, CA), September 26, 2000, p. L2. Independent (London, England), July 17, 1998, p. 19. Latin Beat, April 1997, p. 40.
The most acclaimed female vocalist to arise in Brazil during the 1990s, Marisa Monte is known best for her exquisite voice as well as her international popularity, yet she's also accomplished in other realms such as songwriting, production, and collaboration. Monte first rose to acclaim in 1989, when her debut album -- a live theatrical performance incorporating an eclectic array of songs, past and present -- became a sensation in Brazil. It was her subsequent studio albums, however, Mais (1991) and Verde, Anil, Amarelo, Cor de Rosa e Carvão (1994), that truly established her as a talented artist. For these albums, Monte formed creative partnerships with Arto Lindsay, Arnaldo Antunes, Nando Reis, and Carlinhos Brown, each of whom would work with her for years to come. Moreover, a 1997 double album, Barulhinho Bom, showcased her charismatic command of a concert stage. In 2000 she released Memórias, Crônicas, e Declaracões de Amor on her own Phonomotor Records label and enjoyed her highest level of success to date, notably winning her first Latin Grammy. Two years later she released Tribalistas (2002), a trio effort also featuring Antunes and Brown, on Phonomotor, and enjoyed yet more success. The supergroup recording sold well over a million copies, spun off chart-topping singles, found success in Europe, and was critically beloved all the same. Following such dizzy heights of success, Monte receded from the limelight, becoming a mother and focusing on more challenging music. Even if her popularity waned a bit with age, her credentials among critics only grew, especially internationally. While Monte generally is classified as an MPB artist, her music is fluid and ever-changing, to the point where such labels seem futile. Rather, it's her voice that is her calling card. "One of the most perfect in the world" is how Carlinhos Brown once described it to Larry Rohter of The New York Times. "It's like the wind: soft, gentle, and caressing, but it messes with everything in its path."
Born Marisa de Azevedo Monte on July 1, 1967, in Rio de Janeiro, she grew up in a nurturing musical environment, for her father, Carlos Monte, an economist, was a cultural director at the Portela samba school and immersed her in Rio's time-honored samba tradition. At age 14, Marisa took the entrance exam for the National Music School; she wanted to become an opera singer. She studied lyric singing, and at age 19, she moved to Rome, where she hoped to further her studies and make contacts in the opera world. It wasn't long, however, before Monte returned to Brazil, now harboring hopes of becoming a pop singer. While living in Italy, she'd befriended Nelson Motta, a journalist of some renown, among other capacities, whose sister was a friend of Marisa's mother; associated with the likes of Elis Regina and Joyce, he had played a role in Brazil's popular music scene of the late '60s and early '70s, as both a writer and producer. Back in Brazil, Monte reunited with Motta, who returned in March 1987, not long after she did. Monte had lined up a producer, Lula Buarque de Hollanda, and looked to Motta for help with compiling a repertoire, since he was so knowledgeable about popular music. Motta gladly complied. The performance was titled Veludo Azul (presumably named after David Lynch's film Blue Velvet [1986]) and debuted at Rio's Jazzmania. These performances, which showcased her singing an eclectic array of songs, past and present, were well received critically, and a buzz began to grow, to the point where Monte was selling out shows regularly.
These early theater performances were captured for a TV special and album, MM (aka Ao Vivo), 1989. The TV special was directed by Walter Salles, who himself would go on to much success, directing films including Central Station (1998) and The Motorcycle Diaries (2003) and co-producing others including City of God (2002) and The House of Sand (2005). Motta produced the accompanying album, released in January 1989 by EMI; it showcases Monte performing the same range of songs that had made her show such a crossover hit in the first place: "Comida," originally performed by Titãs, a popular Brazilian rock band of the 1980s featuring Arnaldo Antunes and Nando Reis, the co-writers of the song and, more importantly, key songwriters with whom Monte subsequently would develop fruitful creative partnerships; "Bem Que Se Quis," a song originally written and performed by Italian pop/rock artist Pino Daniele in 1982 as "E Po' Che Fà," in turn adapted to Portuguese by Motta; "Chocolate," by Brazilian soul renegade Tim Maia; "Ando Meio Desligado," by tropicalia favorites Os Mutantes; "Preciso Me Encontrar," a decades-old samba song by singer/composer Candeia (born Antônio Candeia Filho, died 1978); "O Xote das Meninas," a Brazilian standard from the 1950s; "Negro Gato," another old Brazilian song, this one written in the 1960s by Getúlio Côrtes and recorded by various performers, including Renato & Seus Blue Caps and Luís Melodia; "Lenda das Sereias, Rainha do Mar," an old samba song; "South American Way," a song originally written by Al Dubin and Jimmy McHugh for the 1939 musical The Streets of Paris that was shortly thereafter recorded by, and henceforth associated with, Carmen Miranda; "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," a Motown classic written by Barrett Strong and Norman Whitfield and performed most famously by Marvin Gaye; "Bess, You Is My Woman Now," a Gershwin standard; and "Speak Low," a Kurt Weill standard.
MM became a sensation in Brazil, with "Bem Que Se Quis" emerging as a big hit, and the album went on to sell half a million copies. Then her follow-up album, Mais (1991), sold even more. Recorded in New York City with Arto Lindsay in the producer's seat, Mais reflected Monte's own personal style. She co-wrote many of the songs herself and recruited the aforementioned Titãs bandmembers Antunes and Reis to contribute their own writing. Plus, Monte added a few covers, including songs by Caetano Veloso ("De Noite Na Cama") and Pixinguinha ("Rosa"). Thanks to the involvement of Lindsay, Antunes, and Reis, not to mention musical contributions from Ryuichi Sakamoto, Bernie Worrell, Naná Vasconcelos, and John Zorn, Mais is a thoroughly contemporary MPB album, and indeed it registered with the Brazilian public. "Beija Eu," a songwriting collaboration between Antunes and Monte, became a significant hit, as did "Ainda Lembro," one of the Reis collaborations, and a promotional tour of Brazil commenced. In the wake of the album's success, as well as that of the national tour, Monte traveled to the United States and Europe to drum up the attention of critics. She debuted internationally in New York City at the Knitting Factory, where she was greeted warmly, a bellwether of the critical adoration that would accompany her efforts in the years that followed.
For her second studio album, Verde, Anil, Amarelo, Cor de Rosa e Carvão (1994), Monte returned to New York to work with Lindsay. Part of the album was recorded in Rio, however, as Monte assumed a co-production role and continued to assert more control over her music. Antunes and Reis also returned, contributing a few songs ("Alta Noite" was written by the former, "Au Meu Redor" and "O Céu" by the latter), while Monte wrote a few of her own ("Na Estrada," "De Mais Ninguém," "Bem Leve," and "Enquanto Isso") and chose a few covers (Lou Reed's "Pale Blue Eyes," Paulinho da Viola's "Dança da Solidão," and Jorge Ben's "Balança Pema," as well as a traditional samba, "Esta Melodia"). Most notable, however, was a new partnership fostered by Monte, one with Carlinhos Brown, who was at that time the leader of the group Timbalada. Brown contributed a pair of songs, "Maria de Verdade" and "Segue o Seco," that became album standouts; a promotional video was filmed for the latter. Numerous musicians contributed to the album, among them Gilberto Gil, Laurie Anderson, and Celso Fonseca. Moreover, Brown sang and performed on his songs. Like Mais before it, Verde, Anil, Amarelo, Cor de Rosa e Carvão was commercially successful, and it was repackaged for English-language release as Green, Blue, Yellow, Rose and Charcoal (aka Rose and Charcoal). Monte toured in support, more extensively than before, and some live recordings from the tour were released as part of a double album, Barulhinho Bom (1996). The other part of the album is comprised of studio recordings, three of which are songs written by Brown. Barulhinho Bom was repackaged for stateside release as A Great Noise (1997), for there was some controversy over the album's "porno" artwork. A full-length video was issued as well, later reissued on DVD.
Before Monte recorded her next album, Memórias, Crônicas, e Declaracões de Amor (2000), she spread the wealth of her success. Among the contributions she made to the work of others, she performed alongside Antunes on some of his songs, as compiled on Focus: O Essencial de Arnaldo Antunes (1999), and produced Brown's second solo album, Omelete Man (1999). Monte also negotiated her own vanity label, Phonomotor Records, on which she would release albums by Argemiro Patrocínio and Jair do Cavaquinho, in addition to Memórias, Crônicas e Declaracões de Amor, repackaged for English-language markets as Memories, Chronicles and Declarations of Love. The album features many of the same collaborators as before, namely Lindsay, Brown, and Antunes, with a few covers thrown in. Far and away her most commercially successful album to date, if not her most revered, Memórias, Crônicas e Declaracões de Amor won a Latin Grammy for Best Pop Album. Monte's supporting tour was sweeping, accounting for 150 shows; a three-night stand in Rio at the ATL Hall in June 2001 was summarized on DVD later that year. The following year, Monte released Tribalistas (2002) on Phonomotor; the album's success would top even that of Memórias, Crônicas e Declaracões de Amor. Comprised of songs written by Monte, Antunes, and Brown in tandem off and on over the previous couple years, Tribalistas was billed as a group effort, that is, Os Tribalistas, and its supergroup qualities made its release an event. The album was a chart-topper in Brazil and sold well in Europe as well, particularly Portugal, Italy, and France. "Já Sei Namorar" and "Velha Infância" were number one hits, and there were other singles released as well. In addition, a making-of DVD was issued in 2003. Tribalistas earned five Latin Grammy nominations, including Record of the Year ("Jé Sei Namorar") and Album of the Year; an award for Best Brazilian Contemporary Pop Album was brought home.
Monte spent the next few years away from the public eye, as she'd become a mother, and when she returned in 2006, she did so with a pair of albums. Universo ao Meu Redor (2006) is a samba album comprised of songs by classic and contemporary composers, whereas Infinito Particular (2006) is a more personal affair, featuring songs written in collaboration with her many creative partners, a stable whose ranks now included Seu Jorge and Adriana Calcanhotto. Both albums are subdued in their tone and feature a laundry list of instrumentation: Monte alone plays acoustic guitar, bass guitar, autoharp, ukulele, viola, xylophone, melodica, kalimba, metaphone, cajon, vocoder, and baixo, not to mention cymbals, bells, shakers, and various sound effects. Some listeners complained that the albums were too understated; however, critics responded well, as did most existing fans, in addition to a legion of new ones who learned about the albums via their myriad write-ups and Monte's international touring, which stretched on into 2007. The albums spun off a few singles -- "O Bonde do Dom," "Vilarejo," and "Pra Ser Sincero," all Top Ten hits in Brazil -- and earned three Latin Grammy nominations, winning one for Best Samba/Pagode Album. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi
While classically trained in opera singing, she grew up surrounded by the sounds of the Portelasamba school, and combines diverse influences into her music. After failing to break through into 1980s Brazilian Pop rock she went into semi-exile in Italy where she met the famous producer Nelson Motta. Thereafter she became a hybrid of MPB diva and Pop rock performer. While most of her music is in the style of modern MPB, she has also recorded traditional samba and folk tunes, as well and songs performed by Marvin Gaye, Lou Reed and George Harrison. Much of her work has been in collaboration with musicians/songwriters Carlinhos Brown, Arnaldo Antunes, and Nando Reis, and producer Arto Lindsay. She has also worked with foreign artists such as Laurie Anderson, David Byrne, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Julieta Venegas. She has performed live in the United States in such venues as The House of Blues. In 1996, she contributed a version of "Waters of March", in a duet with David Byrne, to the AIDS benefit compilation album Red Hot + Rio produced by the Red Hot Organization. She also collaborated with Bonga and Carlinhos Brown on the track "Mulemba Xangola" for the AIDS benefit compilation album Onda Sonora: Red Hot + Lisbon produced by the same organization. Again, in 2011, she contributed a collaboration with Devendra Banhart and Rodrigo Amarante "Nú Com A Minha Música" ("Naked with My Music") for the Red Hot Organization's most recent charitable album "Red Hot+Rio 2." The album is a follow-up to the 1996 "Red Hot+Rio." Proceeds from the sales will be donated to raise awareness and money to fight AIDS/HIV and related health and social issues.
Marisa Monte is unique as a Brazilian artist in that she owns the rights to all of her songs; it was her chief demand for renewing her contract with EMI Music.[2]
Wikipedia on Answers.com
This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Marisa Monte.
Read more