With Gimme
5, prolific Brazilian singer-songwriter Manu Lafer offers listeners a joyful
slap of the hand, an enthusiastic greeting to audiences around the world as
well, perhaps, as a well-earned celebration for two decades of music-making.
Over those 20 years Lafer has penned more than 300 songs, 100 of which have
been recorded by some of the most renowned artists in Brazilian music and
American jazz – all while maintaining a busy career as a pediatrician.
Lafer has
collaborated with such stellar artists as Dori Caymmi, John and Bucky
Pizzarelli, Toninho Horta, Chuck Redd, Howard Alden, Maude Maggart, Ná Ozzetti,
Ken Peplowski, Warren Vaché, and countless others. On Gimme 5, due out October
12 (being distributed through Megaforce Records), Lafer interprets his own
deeply personal songs as only a composer can. “When we sing the songs we wrote,
we sing them in a special way because we mean what we sing,” Lafer says. “Each
song is a different journey, a different musical landscape.”
For Lafer,
those landscapes are painted with the vivid colors of his own unique
influences. His songwriting follows in the breezy, sun-dappled tradition of
pioneering songwriters like Dorival Caymmi, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Gilberto Gil
and Lafer’s major influence, João Gilberto. Like each of them, he has created a
unique sound drawn from his own particular blend of styles: a wealth of
Brazilian rhythms from bossa nova to baião, melded with early Brazilian
innovators from the days of radio, American songbook classics, contemporary
jazz, and pop music of the 60s and 70s.
The
compositions of Gimme 5 are further enriched by the production and arranging
gifts of Sandro Albert, Lafer’s partner in the duo Run N’ Fly, who also plays
guitar throughout the album. Albert frames Lafer’s tune with influences from
Afro-Caribbean music as well as sleek jazz and rock fusion touches. “Sandro is
very different from me, and brings things to my music that nobody can,” Lafer
says. “He never wants to stay on the same page and do the same thing. That’s
what we have in common.”
The music is
brought to vibrant life by an international all-star band, including drummers
Lionel Cordew (Spyro Gyra) and Cliff Almond (Michel Camilo), bassist Mark Egan
(Weather Report), pianist Helio Alves (Claudio Roditi), percussionists Bashiri
Johnson (Michael Jackson) and Mino Cinélu (Miles Davis), and vocalists Cindy
Mizelle (Steely Dan) and Sachal Vasandani (Wynton Marsalis).
Lafer’s
diverse range of influences can be heard out of the gate on opener “Era Pra
Ser,” which combines the lyricism of Caetano Veloso with the compelling groove
of Gilberto Gil. The song, which translates as “it was meant to be,” is the
portrait of an idealized romance, the ecstatic thrill of which shines through
brilliantly.
“A Jura,”
previously recorded by Maude Maggart, is another positive view of love, albeit
a more complicated (some might say realistic) one. The song meditates on the
way that two people telling each other “I love you” may use the same words but
mean entirely different things. While many songwriters may take that as hinting
at friction to come, Lafer sees it as a necessary delusion. “The mystery of
love is that people love each other for reasons unknown to their partner,” he
explains. “Since they say the same thing they stay together, but they never
understand what’s really going on. A relationship can be good, even if we never
know why.”
“Passos”
offers Lafer’s take on the characteristic Brazilian sensation of “saudade” – a
unique feeling of nostalgic melancholy that is untranslatable in words but can
be felt somewhere deeper through the singer’s moving performance. “Even if you
don't understand Portuguese, I think you can guess what the lyrics are saying,”
he says.
While
Americans rarely use their middle names, Brazilians tend to invest them with
more meaning, giving Lafer the premise for the delectably confused love story
of “Clara Maria.” The song’s narrator isn’t torn between two women but between
the warring personalities of his one love, represented by her two names. “It’s
a man who really loves this woman, but he can’t decide which part of her he
likes best,” the songwriter laughs. “So he’s suffering -- but in a good
way."
The sensual
“Amor Primeiro” takes an alluring turn into bolero, drawing inspiration from
the songs of Chico Buarque, while “Faz Anos” casts a glance back at Lafer’s own
teenage years, when he wrote the song. A young man’s conflicted but starry-eyed
view of São Paulo, the tune’s infectious grooves are touched by a hint of
Steely Dan cool left over from Run N’ Fly’s more R&B-oriented approach. “Ou
Sou Eu” also has personal meaning from Lafer’s past: it was originally recorded
by Dori Caymmi for the songwriter’s wedding (and later as a duo on one of
Lafer’s earlier albums). It’s a nostalgic view of a bygone Brazil inspired by
Lafer’s friendship with the Caymmi musical dynasty.
Another
revered Brazilian artist, singer and guitarist Toninho Horta, co-wrote and sings
with Cindy Mazelle on the English-language “WWI,” an unusual song inspired by
the literary works of William Faulkner and Thomas Wolfe. As those authors
looked at the faceless soldiers killed in war and saw their individual
humanity, so “WWI” uses the nicknames given to nationalities in the First World
War – proper names like Jerry and Sammy standing in for Germans or Americans,
respectively – to explore the human beings behind the tragic statistics.
Two other
songs are performed in English as well, translations of favorites from Lafer’s
songbook: “Come,” which provided the slang phrase for the album’s title in its
simple come-on; and “Did I Need To Repeat,” a more complicated tale of a father
and son and the words – never spoken in the lyrics – that have passed between
them.
The playful
“Minha Senhora” is Lafer’s twist on a nursery rhyme, empowering a sleepy child
to scare off the phantoms that swarm around their bed. The shifting harmonies
of “Pra Voce Viajar” echo the intricacy of bossa nova with more gently
propulsive Latin rhythms. The album draws to a close with the gleeful “Um Par,”
a love song that toys with the titular idea of “a pair.”
Having lived
in the U.S. and his native Brazil, and formed deep partnerships with incredible
artists in both countries, Lafer is excited to bring his unique blend of the
two musical countries to the world via his stellar songwriting. “By saying
Gimme 5, I wanted to invite people to come close to the music and listen,” he
says. “It’s not a problem if they don't understand the lyrics. People naturally
gather around music, so I want to help make that happen.”
Manu Lafer
is a composer, singer, and pediatrician from São Paulo, Brazil. He has composed
more than 300 songs, more than 100 of which have been recorded. He has
developed a unique, signature sound, by drawing upon a vast range of Brazilian
and American rhythms and harmonies for his compositions.
Manu
has had the honor of working with some of Brazil’s most revered composers,
arrangers and singers, along with celebrated names abroad. In Brazil he has
worked closely with Danilo Caymmi, Dori Caymmi, Nana Caymmi, Luiz Tatit, Ná
Ozzetti, Germano Mathias, Cris Aflalo, Lincoln Olivetti, Luiz Brasil, Jacques
Morelembaum, Mario Manga, Jetter Garroti Jr., and Fabio Tagliaferri, among
others. Outside of Brazil he has collaborated with the tap-dancer Steve Zee,
and recorded with guitarists Bucky Pizzarelli, John Pizzarelli and Howard
Alden; Ken Peplowski, Warren Vaché, Jeanne Gies and Maude Maggart.
Manu Lafer ·
Gimme 5
Release
Date: October 12, 2018
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