Search - Gilberto Gil :: Gilberto Gil (Nęga)

Gilberto Gil (Nêga)
Gilberto Gil
Gilberto Gil (Nęga)
Genres: International Music, Latin Music
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Released in 1971 while Gil was living in London, this is the 3rd self-titled release from the bosssa nova and tropicalia legend. Gil recorded this album while in political exile from his native Brazil and its somber, strai...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Gilberto Gil
Title: Gilberto Gil (Nęga)
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Water
Release Date: 3/20/2007
Genres: International Music, Latin Music
Styles: South & Central America, Brazil
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
Other Editions: Gilberto Gil 1971
UPCs: 646315719109, 646315719123

Synopsis

Product Description
Released in 1971 while Gil was living in London, this is the 3rd self-titled release from the bosssa nova and tropicalia legend. Gil recorded this album while in political exile from his native Brazil and its somber, straightforward tone is a welcome change frm the experimental, psychedelic assault of his 1969 long player. Featuring 7 originals and a brilliant cover of Steve Winwood's Can't Find My Way Home', this Water release also contains 3 bonus tracks including covers of Jimi Hendrix and the Beatles. A tropicalia classic. Reissued 2007.
 

CD Reviews

A Brazilian "tropicalia" classic
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 04/15/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Songwriter-guitarist Gilberto Gil was, along with his collaborator Caetano Veloso, a founding member of the hippie-ish "tropicalia" movement, which merged Brazilian art forms with the psychedelic and "new wave" movements from Europe and the USA.



Gil's career took off at roughly the same time that Brazilian politics devolved into a military coup, and accordingly the great cultural radical ran afoul of the new dictatorship. In 1969 Veloso and Gil were arrested, then sent into European exile, where they remained for several years. This album was recorded in London, during that exile, and features Gil at his most searching and haunted. The album includes groovy acoustic versions of several songs that appear (in electrified, rock-funk form) on other albums, as well as some truly goofy, delerious English-language psych-folk tunes, including "Three Mushrooms," which has a Tim Buckley-ish spaciness to it. This expanded version includes three bonus tracks, most notably a cover of Steve Winwood's "Can't Find My Way Home," which takes on renewed poignance, given what Gil was going through at the time.



By the way, Gil certainly got his revenge: he and Veloso returned to Brazil in 1972 and became, despite the ongoing censorship and political paranoia, huge pop stars, and are considered two of the most influential musicians in modern Brazilian pop. Not only that, but Gil even went into politics himself, getting elected to office locally in Bahia, and is currently (in 2007) serving as the country's Minister of Culture. How's that for a happy ending? So, here he is in his youth, banished but not bowed, soaking up the psychedelic wackiness of Swinging London, and sending it back home for everyone to hear... And now you can, too!"