Sorted Orignal Cover



Search
Title:

Baden Powell (1971)

Cover: front  /  back
Tracks:
  1. Carinhoso
  2. Violao Vadio
  3. Bom De Dedo
  4. Naquele Tempo
  5. Gente Humilde
  6. Rosa
  7. Pausa Para Meditacao
  8. Marcia Meu Amor
  9. Filho De Furinha *
  10. 1:0 (Um a zero)
Musicians: Baden Powell (git, vcl)
Cesario Alvim (b)
Nelson Serra de Castro (dr)
Luis Agudo, Silvio Silveira (perc)
Janine de Waleyne (vcl)
Jean Michel Defaye (orchestra)
Label: Barclay (France)
LP number: 80.431 U (1971)
Year of performance: Studio Barclay-Hoche, Paris, 20-22 January 1971
Guitar Model: Author 3 by luthier Reinaldo DiGiorgio
Also published on: Le grand festival (LP, France, 1971)
Baden Powell Portrait (LP, France, 1975)
Description:

Mint copies of the French first pressing (80.431 U) are hard to find. Most pressings as of 1972 do not contain the liner notes by Jacques Lubin. Unfortunately, there was not payed much attention to the record's title, so it got almost lost among the Barclay compilations that flooded the market. Baden Powell interpreta [...] would have made more sense. Somebody tried to distinguish the record naming it "Carinhoso", but thus only deepening the chaos, as we think. The record was and remained unknown under this title. In our discography we prefer the title Baden Powell (1971).
Some tracks of the recordings got never released elsewhere.

Style:
Orchestrated arrangements and solo pieces, compositions by Garoto, Pixinguinha and Baden Powell
Comments:  

BrazilOnGuitar says: BP begins the year 1971 with his 6th and last recording on the Barclay label. It is an hommage to Garoto and Pixinguinha, except for two compositions of his own. This record from January is very different from its three antecessors. The first and highly succesful Quartet formation was splitting up so he chose musicians that had accompanied him on the two Le Monde Musical recordings. With them he would turn back years, stylistically.

Possibly, Baden was too tired from intensive studio work and last years' European tours to work on new material and deepen the quest for musical freedom. Maybe that is how this musical hommage was made by re-arranging existing compositions.
Four months later he would again travel to Japan. Until the end of 1971 he would have recorded with new energy and new compositions six more records.

* "Furinha" is the nick name of the brazilian composer Demerval Fonseca Neto.

We thank Robert G. (Germany) for his translation.

back to original recordings  /  back to index