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Miami
NewTimes.com
December 18, 2000
Keeping
Bossa Nova
Heather Davis and Rose Max tend to Brazilian jazz
By Maya Ibars - www.miaminewtimes.com
At the Van Dyke
Café on a rainy Wednesday night, a tall blond with an American accent
is singing in Portuguese to a crowd of couples sipping wine and
chatting softly. As her hips sway slightly and her feet trace out
samba steps on the stage, Heather Davis sings "Tristeza," a song
written some 40 years ago by Brazilian musicians-composers Antonio
Carlos Jobim and João Gilberto. Tucking her hair behind one ear
and smiling with wine-stained lips, the Detroit native translates
the lyrics for the audience. "Tristeza não tem fim, felicidade sim,"
Davis says in her smoky voice. "Well you know, sadness; it always
exists, but happiness has a short life. So you have to grab it while
you can."
Davis grabbed
her happiness in bossa nova as have so many of her compatriots,
including Don Wilner, musical director at the Van Dyke. Wilner,
who also plays bass, has organized not one but two nights of Brazilian
jazz there every week. In addition to Davis, Rose Max, a carioca
from Rio de Janeiro, performs on Sundays. Contrasting Davis's introspective
reserve, Max is grand. She fills the stage and the entire nightclub
with her booming vocals and wide open-armed gestures. The notes
she hits are precise and the melody expertly articulated, the result
of training from her husband-coach Ramatis Morães, who also accompanies
her on the acoustic guitar.
Max did not
perform bossa nova in Brazil. She took up the laid-back groove when
she encountered a receptive audience after moving to Miami seven
years ago. Max finds playing for North Americans fulfilling because,
she says, "they love the music even if they may not even understand
what it is I am saying." The love affair between American audiences
and Brazilian jazz began in 1961, when Stan Getz and Dizzy Gillespie
formed part of a group of U.S. musicians touring Latin America who
were amazed by the suave sounds from Brazil. In 1962 the coolest
cats in Manhattan turned out for Jobim and Gilberto's first concert
in the United States, held at Carnegie Hall. The success of that
event landed the Brazilians major recording deals and enticed a
number of big-name stars, including Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole,
and Ella Fitzgerald, to chime in. Even Elvis Presley tipped his
pompadour to the Brazilian crooners when he sang "Bossa Nova Baby"
in 1963. In 1964 the only song more popular than Getz and Gilberto's
"The Girl from Ipanema" was the Beatles' "I Want to Hold Your Hand."
Jobim earned a green card from the U.S. government as an "alien
of extraordinary ability." Following in his footsteps, bossa nova
preservationist Rose Max has the same visa status in the works.
Like the Beatles
bossa nova has endured. "Americans like bossa nova because it is
familiar," offers Brazilian-American Gina Martell, host of the radio
program Braz Jazz, on WTMI-FM (93.1). That familiarity stems from
then genre's jazz element: an air of relaxed elegance, unconventional,
sometimes discordant harmonies, and an emphasis on improvisation.
To the intricate jazz rhythm patterns bossa nova adds steady samba
tempos, sultry harmonies, and the sex appeal of lyrics sung in Portuguese.
The musicians at the Van Dyke play up the cross-fertilization of
North American jazz and Brazilian popular music at times, as when
pianist Howie "Jaui" Schneider and bass player Wilner sneak several
bars of Duke Ellington's "Take the "A' Train" into a bossa nova
standard during Max's set.
Although bossa
nova is every bit as North American as it is Brazilian, that dual
citizenship is sometimes obscured by the music's exotic South American
pedigree. "I love playing with Brazilian musicians because it is
more authentic," enthuses Wilner. "I get to take a trip to Brazil
once a week." Wilner, however, has never actually traveled to Brazil.
There, bossa nova is one rhythm among many in an incredibly diverse
soundscape. The Brazilian masses bounce their bunda to rock, hip-hop,
and contemporary twists on samba, like the fast-paced pagode or
the laid-back forró from the northeast. Popular musicians Caetano
Veloso, Marisa Monte, and Djavan all perform MPB (música popular
Brasileira), an offshoot of bossa nova and rock with a trademark
samba beat. Old-timers Jobim and Gilberto are still cherished, but
today's generation is far more interested in the bossa nova trance
CDs of Bebel Gilberto than the dusty albums of her father. Which
of these musics is more authentic would be hard to say.
Immigration
from Brazil has re-created that sonic diversity here in South Florida,
with significant communities living in Miami-Dade and Broward. Max
suggests that the county line separates the good from the bad. "Here
[in Miami-Dade] there are more intellectuals," she argues, "and
there is more of an opportunity to do good Brazilian music, like
bossa nova."
"Bad" Brazilian
music, presumably, would be the pagode, forró, and other contemporary
forms that continue to evolve in Brazil without ever winning a North
American audience. By distinguishing between the two, Max makes
the case for maintaining her repertoire of bossa nova standards.
If bossa nova
is now better received in the United States than in Brazil, it should
come as no surprise that U.S.-Brazilian collaborations fuel the
genre's innovations. On her new CD, Check the Beans, Heather Davis
has paired with flautist Jill Russell to recruit the talents of
several Brazilian musicians, including percussionist Claudio Slon,
who originally played with Jobim; and Jovino Santos Neto, former
piano player for Hermeto Pascual. The ensemble has produced a new
blend of Brazilian influences and U.S. jazz. "R&B is all funky;
jazz gets boring, but it's got a great beat and melody," Davis explains.
"Brazilian music makes the bridge between the groove and the melody."
On Check the Beans Davis returns to the jazz singing style she practiced
for many years before discovering bossa nova in a samba class.
On the opening
track, "Only One Day," a song Davis wrote in English, she sings
in a low controlled range while the arrangement behind her remixes
jazz and samba. Russell trades her flute for a jazzy alto sax here
while Slon on drums and Celso Machado on tamborim maintain the background
tingle of a steady samba. Pianist Santos Neto modernizes the sound
with his electric keyboard. Near the end of the track, Davis's voice
recedes, blending the funky understatement of Stevie Wonder with
the lullabylike tones of Diana Krall. "Viola Fora de Moda" is a
typical baião rhythm from the northeast of Brazil with a duel between
piano and flute standing in for the viola battles typical of that
folkloric music.
The flute also
carries the melody on the title track. The instrumental piece written
by Russell vacillates between a contemporary classical composition
and a Brazilian forró with an accordion-sounding keyboard, bird
calls, and jaw harp. At times Russell is almost tropical, like Nestor
Torres. A six-string electric bass adds depth to the otherwise airy
harmonies, inspired perhaps by the cello that the Jobim Morelebaum
Quartet has added to Tom Jobim's classics. The most complex song
on the disc is another baião called "Baião do Porão" ("Basement
Baião"). The melody is in three parts: Davis's vocals sound out
the notes (there are no lyrics) while Bill Kopper's guitar and Russell's
flute follow tightly in unison. Machado adds Brazilian timbre with
a quick and steady triangle. The overall feel of the piece is very
jazzy, and fans from the Van Dyke can picture Davis's head bopping
down and back with each bar. She ends the song dreamily, trailing
up as Machado shakes a percussion toy that sounds like rain. In
"Balanga Beiço" ("Big-Lipped Black Man"), a duet written by Machado,
Davis articulates over the busy instrumental arrangements. Russell
adds Latin flair, ending the piece on a high note. Overall Check
the Beans sounds bossa nova in texture, jazz in melody.
Davis attributes
the folkloric touches on the CD to a desire to branch out from Brazilian
standards. "Since getting into bossa nova," she explains, "I like
more and more the rootsiness of the northeast, with its different
types of grooves." By experimenting with a wide variety of Brazilian
music, Check the Beans breaks away from the illusion of a single
authentic Brazilian sound. There is happiness in that, too. "The
Brazilian musicians love it," Davis says of the fresher fusion,
"because it was the opportunity to play something other than "The
Girl from Ipanema.'"
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