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Ney Matogrosso

 
Artist: Ney Matogrosso
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Latin
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "O Cair Da Tarde," "Brazilian Collection," "Canto Em Qualquer Canto"

Biography

An uncommon artist with an uncommon sopranino voice, Ney Matogrosso fell in the Brazilian popular music scene like a bomb in the '70s aboard the Secos e Molhados. The end of the group marked the beginning of a fertile and successful solo career in which he began exploring his sensuous and charismatic persona through satiric and ironic repertories. As time passed, he substituted self-contained and deeply sensitive interpretations of classics for the popular and classical Brazilian music. Along with his representative and prolific solo discography, for which he received three platinum and three gold records, Matogrosso recorded in Itália with Astor Piazzola, performed in Argentina, Uruguay, participated in two Montreux Jazz Festivals (Switzerland), and toured Portugal several times. He also performed in Israel and the U.S., but always refused invitations to develop an international career. Matogrosso also worked as an actor in Sonho de Valsa (by Ana Carolina, the director, not the singer/composer) and Caramujo Flor (short subject by Joel Pizzini), and directed shows by RPM, Cazuza, and Simone.

Arriving in Rio de Janeiro in 1966, Matogrosso became a hippie leather artisan and divided his time between Rio, São Paulo, and Brasília, where he was a close friend of singer/composer Luli. Through her he met João Ricardo, who had a vision for a groundbreaking group and was searching for a high-pitched male voice. Invited by Ricardo, Matogrosso moved to São Paulo where he spent one year dedicating himself to exhaustive rehearsals, artisanship, and theater plays. With the explosive success of Secos e Molhados and the group's final dissolution, Matogrosso started his solo career exploring his unusual voice timbre, his mesmerizing scenic persona, and his androgynous visuals, enhanced by innovative and exotic costumes. A second solo album, Água do Céu/Pássaro, was supported by the show Homem de Neanderthal, in 1975, with which Matogrosso opened in Rio de Janeiro, drawing both raves and packed houses. "Barco Negro" and "Homem com H" appeared amongst considerable polemics aroused by the usual conservatives on duty. In that period, he worked with Astor Piazzola in Milan, Italy, where he recorded a double single with the Argentinean composer. A cleaner Matogrosso recorded Bandido in 1976, having his first national hit as a solo artist with "Bandido Corazón," written especially for him by Rita Lee. While Matogrosso wanted to challenge prejudices and preconceptions with his satiric, ironic, and sensuous performances and choices of repertory, he also wanted to be regarded as a serious and sensitive interpreter. He tried to gain this respect with his memorable renditions of songs by complex composers like Chico Buarque: "Deixa a Menina," "Tanto Amar," "Até o Fim," and the album Um Brasileiro (1996). But he also wanted to be regarded as an evolving and open-minded artist associating himself to the nascent Brazilian rock of the '80s, recording "Por que a Gente é assim?," "Pro dia nascer Feliz," "Fogo e Risco," and "Tão Perto." In 1986, with the show A Luz do Solo,Matogrosso abandoned all fantasies and focused exclusively on his mature singing, passionately revisiting classics of Brazilian popular music like "Dora," "Nem Eu," "Retrato em Branco e Preto," "Último Desejo," "Três Apitos," "Da Cor do Pecado," "No Rancho Fundo," "Modinha," "Autonomia," and "Na Baixa do Sapateiro." Accompanied by the best Brazilian musicians since beginning as a solo artist, he surpassed all expectations with the show Pescador de Pérolas (1987), in which he had Raphael Rabello, Arthur Moreira Lima, Paulo Moura, and Chacal both in the live performances and on the album. In 1992, he also had splendid accompaniment, this time by the group Aquarela Carioca, in his show and album As Aparências Enganam (released the next year), where he performed "El Manisero." In 1997, Matogrosso recorded Cair da Tarde, an ambitious project devoted to the works of Tom Jobim and Heitor Villa-Lobos. Having proven his point earlier in life, Matogrosso has dedicated himself to his deep renditions of the classics of Brazilian popular music. This spirit dominates Batuque (2001), in which he focuses on sambas, choros, and Carnival marchinhas of the '30s and '40s. ~ Alvaro Neder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Ney Matogrosso
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Ney Matogrosso
Birth name Ney de Sousa Pereira
Born August 1, 1941 (age 67)
Bela Vista, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil
Genre(s) MPB
Occupation(s) Singer, music producer
Instrument(s) Singer
Years active 1971-present
Associated acts Secos & Molhados

Ney de Sousa Pereira, known as Ney Matogrosso, (born August 1, 1941, in Bela Vista, Mato Grosso do Sul) is a Brazilian singer.

Contents

Biography

Matogrosso enlisted in the Brazilian Air Force at the age of 17, being later transferred to Brasília. Within a few years, Matogrosso started singing in a vocal quartet, performing at college festivals throughout Brazil. With the hope of becoming a stage actor, Ney moved to Rio de Janeiro in 1966, where he lived as a hippie and made ends meet by selling arts and crafts. In 1971, he moved to São Paulo, adopting the artistic name Ney Matogrosso, and joined the rock group Secos & Molhados, which in less than 18 months became a phenomenon, selling 1 million records. Endowed with a unique counter-tenor voice and a striking stage presence, Ney’s career soared.

After the group Secos e Molhados split up, Ney pursued a successful solo career in Brazil and abroad, obtaining several Gold and Platinum records.

Famous for his outlandish costumes, make-up, daring movements and singular high-pitch voice, Ney has always been regarded as a polemic character. One of his greatest hits was the song "Homem com H" (by Antônio Barros).

In the 1970s he released albums that were very important for his career: "Pecado", "Bandido", "Feitiço" and "Seu Tipo". In that period, Ney toured round United States, Argentina, Uruguay, Europe and Israel, performing hits like "América do Sul" (Paulo Machado), "Bandolero" (Lucinha) and "Não Existe Pecado ao Sul do Equador" (Chico Buarque/ Rui Guerra). In the 80's, Ney recorded "Por Debaixo dos Panos" (Ceceu), "Tanto Amar" (Chico Buarque), "Ando Meio Desligado" (Mutantes), "Sangue Latino" (João Ricardo/ Paulo Mendonça) and "Vereda Tropical" (Gonzalo Curiel).

In 1986, Matogrosso performed for the first time without wearing fancy costumes, adopting a low-key image. Since then, he has focused on his work as a singer, recording from the traditional repertoire of MPB (Música Popular Brasileira — the so-called Brazilian pop music genre). Recordings in this genre first appeared on the album "O Pescador de Pérolas" (1986), which featured "O Mundo É um Moinho" (Cartola), "Dora" (Dorival Caymmi), "Da Cor do Pecado" (Bororó) and "Aquarela do Brasil" (Ary Barroso).

Ney toured with guitarist Raphael Rabello, with whom he recorded the album "À Flor da Pele" in 1990. Then, he made two albums as a tribute to Brazilian performers/songwriters, like Ângela Maria ("Estava Escrito", 1994) and Chico Buarque ("Um Brasileiro", 1996).

Discography

Albums

  • Água do Céu-Pássaro, also known as Homem de Neanderthal (1975)
  • Bandido (1976)
  • Pecado (1977)
  • Feitiço (1978)
  • Seu Tipo (1979)
  • Sujeito Estranho (1980)
  • Ney Matogrosso (1981)
  • Mato Grosso (1982)
  • ...Pois É (1983)
  • Destino de Aventureiro (1984)
  • Bugre (1986)
  • Pescador de Pérolas (1987)
  • Quem Não Vive Tem Medo da Morte (1988)
  • Ney Matogrosso Ao Vivo (1989)
  • À Flor da Pele (1990) - with Raphael Rabello
  • As Aparências Enganam (1993) - with Aquarela Carioca
  • Estava Escrito (1994)
  • Um Brasileiro (1996)
  • O Cair da Tarde (1997)
  • Olhos de Farol (1999)
  • Vivo (2000)
  • Batuque (2001)
  • Ney Matogrosso Interpreta Cartola (2002)
  • Ney Matogrosso Interpreta Cartola Ao Vivo (2003)
  • Vagabundo (2004) - with Pedro Luís e a Parede
  • Canto em Qualquer Canto (2005)
  • Vagabundo ao vivo(2005) - with Pedro Luís e a Parede

Extras

  • A FLORESTA DO AMAZONAS - VILLA-LOBOS 1988
  • BRAZIL NIGHT - AO VIVO EM MONTREUX - CAETANO VELOSO, JOÃO BOSCO E NEY MATOGROSSO 1983

Compilations

  • VINTE E CINCO 1996
  • JUNTOS - NEY MATOGROSSO e SECOS & MOLHADOS

Appearances

  • Secos e Molhados (1973)
  • Secos e Molhados (1974)
  • GRAVADO AO VIVO NO MARACANÃZINHO (1980)

References


 
 
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