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Caetano Veloso (born 7 August 1942) is one of the most popular and
influential Brazilian composers and singers.
He was born in Santo Amaro da Purificação, Bahia, the fifth of the seven
children born to José Telles Veloso ("Seu Zezinho") and Claudionor Vianna
Telles Veloso ("Dona Canô"). He chose the name for his baby sister (Veloso's
parents's sixth child), named after a famous song of the time (18 June 1946)
by Nelson Gonçalves, Maria Bethânia. His sister preceded him to fame as a
singer in the mid-1960s.
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He began his career singing bossa nova and he has cited his greatest musical
influences from his early period as João Gilberto and Dorival Caymmi. (João
Gilberto would say later about Caetano's contribution that it added an
intellectual dimension to brazilian popular music.) But with such musical
collaborators Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa, Tom Zé, and Os Mutantes, and greatly
influenced by the later work of The Beatles, developed tropicalismo, which
fused Brazilian pop with rock and roll and avant garde art music resulting
in a more international, psychedelic, and socially aware sound. Veloso's
politically active stance, unapologetically leftist, earned him the enmity
of Brazil's military dictatorship which ruled until 1985; his songs were
frequently censored, and some were banned. Veloso and Gilberto Gil spent
several months in jail for "anti-government activity" in 1968 and eventually
exiled themselves to London. Caetano Veloso's work upon his return in 1972
was often characterized by frequent appropriations not only of international
styles, but of half-forgotten Brazilian folkloric styles and rhythms as well.
In particular, his celebration of the Afro-Brazilian culture of Bahia can be
seen as the precursor of such Afro-centric groups as Timbalada.
In the 1980s, Veloso's popularity outside Brazil grew, especially in Israel,
Portugal, France and Africa. By 2004, he was one of the most respected and
prolific international pop stars, with more than fifty recordings available,
including songs in soundtracks of movies such as Pedro Almodovar's Hable con
Ella (Talk to Her), and Frida. In 2002 Veloso published an account of his
early years and the Tropicalia movement, Tropical Truth: A Story of Music
and Revolution in Brazil.
His first all-English CD was A Foreign Sound (2004), which covers Nirvana's
"Come as You Are" and compositions from the Great American Songbook. Five of
the six songs on his third eponymous album, released in 1971, were also in
English. |
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CAETANO VELOSO PICTURES |
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MOST POPULAR
Angelina Jolie
Jessica Alba
Paris Hilton
Scarlett Johansson
Jessica Simpson
Britney Spears
Christina Aguilera
Lindsay Lohan
Shakira
Beyonce
Hilary Duff
ADDITIONS
Miley Cyrus
Rihanna
Hayden Panettiere
Miranda Cosgrove
Selena Gomez
Demi Lovato
Vanessa Hudgens
Ashley Tisdale
Jonas Brothers
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