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Egberto Gismonti
  
 
AKAMU representation: Worldwide Exclusivity 
For info and costs please contact Luciano Bertrand 
 
 
Egberto Gismonti Solo 
 
Egberto Gismonti - piano, acoustic guitar 
available also as a Special Guest with Orchestra 
 
 
 biography  
Egberto Gismonti is world-renowned as a multi-instrumentalist and composer. 
He was profoundly influenced by Brazilian master Heitor Villa-Lobos, 
his works reflecting the musical diversity of Brazil. 
From the Amazon Indians' batuque to the Carioca samba and choro, through the 
Northeastern frevo, baião, and forró, Gismonti captures the true essence of the 
brazilian soul in a way that is primitive, yet sophisticated, and reflects it through 
his personal vision, elaborated by years of classic training and literacy in a wealth 
of musical languages in which jazz plays a significant role. 
From a musical family, in which his grandfather and his uncle Edgar were bandleaders, 
he started to take piano and theory classes at five. At that time, he also started to 
learn the flute and the clarinet, eventually taking the violão (acoustic guitar) in 
his teens. Following the piano classical tradition because of his father, he embraced 
the guitar to please his italian mother, who was very fond of serenatas. 
Trying to transpose the piano's polyphonic quality for the guitar, he ended several years later 
with three custom-made instruments (10-, 12-, and 14-stringed) and a personally 
developed two-hand technique. At eight, he started to study piano with Brazilian 
masters Jacques Klein and Aurélio Silveira for a 15-year apprenticeship. Establishing 
himself in Nova Friburgo, a small town near Rio, for one year and four months, 
he attended the Nova Friburgo Music Conservatory. Awarded with a scholarship to study 
classical music in Vienna, Austria, at 20, he refused it in order to delve deeper in 
the popular side. 
In October 1968, his composition "O Sonho," arranged by him for a 
100-piece orchestra, was presented at the third International Song Festival (FIC), 
promoted by TV Globo, Rio, by the group Os Três Morais. This song, with its uncanny 
orchestration, provoked enthusiasm around and was recorded 18 different times by 
several international artists. Soon after in that year, he left Brazil for France, 
where he became the conductor and orchestrator for the French singer Marie Laforêt in 
an association that lasted for one and a half years. It was instrumental for him to 
meet and became a pupil of the great masters Jean Barraqué (1928-1973), 
a disciple of Anton Webern, and Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979), a former consultant to 
Igor Stravinsky. The additional importance of these two icons upon Gismonti's career 
was to stress the unique richness of his country's background and urge him to pursue 
a singular expression rooted in the cabocla and mestiça tradition. This would cause him 
to return to Brazil in 1971. 
His first LP, Egberto Gismonti, was already released in 
1969 through Elenco. There, he sang his own songs and had a partnership with the bossa 
nova composer Paulo Sérgio Vale. Also in 1969, he presented himself at the San Remo 
Festival in Italy. In 1970, he toured through Europe, recording two singles in France, 
one LP in Italy, one in Brazil ("Sonho 70"), and one LP in Germany ("Orfeu Novo"). 
His song "Mercador de Serpentes" was presented at the fifth FIC in 1970. Returning to 
Brazil in 1971, he settled in Teresópolis, another small town close to Rio. He played 
in several venues in Brazil and his music was included on the soundtracks of the movies 
"A Penúltima Donzela" (Fernando Amaral, 1969), "Confissões de Frei Abóbora" (Brás Chediak, 
1971), and "Em Família" (Paulo Porto, 1971). In 1972, he recorded "Água e Vinho" 
in partnership with poet Geraldo Carneiro and in 1973, Egberto Gismonti and 
Adademia de Danças, all three LPs through EMI/Odeon, the latter of which was the 
turning point when he began to stress his instrumental work. After its recording, 
the producer said it made no sense at all. He received a note from EMI/Odeon saying 
that, due to Brazil's economic difficulties, that would be the last album of 
Gismonti's career: it was an album outside of any category, with 25 minute tracks, 
expensively produced with synths and orchestra. This album was awarded with the Golden 
Record in Brazil. From 1972 to 1991, he would record 19 albums for EMI/Odeon. In 1974, 
he accepted an invitation to play at a festival in Berlin, Germany, and asked 
Hermeto Pascoal and Naná Vasconcelos to join him in his presentation. 
He then met ECM's CEO, Manfred Eicher. Returning to Brazil, he received a letter from 
ECM in 1975, inviting him to record with them. Not knowing what would be the importance 
of that label, he postponed the response until the end of 1976. Then he accepted the 
invitation, imagining he'd record with the all-star Brazilian group he was performing 
with by then: drummer/percussionist Robertinho Silva, bassist Luis Alves, and saxophonist/flutist 
Nivaldo Ornelas. But the Brazilian military government had imposed a high fee for all 
leaving brazilians at about 7.000 dollars. Being that cipher prohibitive for anyone in 
that group but him, he decided to record solo. Fearing that challenge, he was wandering 
through Norway when he met a brazilian actor who was his friend. Invited to his home, 
he met brazilian percussionist Naná Vasconcelos there. Having to record the album in 
three days, he decided to have Vasconcelos into it, and asked by him to describe the 
album's concept, he explained that both of them had a common history, and he proposed 
Vasconcelos use that album for telling it. It was the history of two boys wandering 
through a dense, humid forest, full of insects and animals, keeping a 180-feet distance 
from each other. He knew Vasconcelos would accept without hesitation, and he did. His 
LP "Dança das Cabeças" with Vasconcelos received several contradictory international 
awards reflecting Brazilian cultural richness: in England, it was awarded as a pop 
record; in  USA, as folklore music; in Germany, as classical music. Either way, 
it changed both artists' lives: Vasconcelos immediately became a disputed international 
artist, touring worldwide; Gismonti returned to Brazil and decided to research Amazon 
folklore. In the heart of the Amazon forest, Alto Xingu, he tried to make contact with 
the Yawaiapitì tribe, playing his flute for two weeks until head chief Sapaim invited 
him to his home. They shared no common language other than music and Gismonti spent 
about a month living and learning with them, upon the condition of spreading the forest 
people's values. Two years later, with saxophonist Jan Garbarek, percussionist Colin 
Walcott, and guitarist Ralph Towner, he recorded "Sol do Meio-Dia". 
His LP "Solo", released that next year, sold 100.000 copies in USA. 
In 1981, with Garbarek and bassist Charlie Haden, he recorded the LP "Magico". The same year, 
the trio toured Europe, including a concert at the Berlin Jazz Festival, and recorded 
a second Magico album, entitled "Folksongs". 
In 1981, Gismonti again toured with Haden and Garbarek, performing throughout Europe. 
Also in that year, he recorded with 
his all-star group Academia de Danças (drummer Nenê, saxophonist/flutist Mauro Senise, 
and bassist Zeca Assunção) the double album "Sanfona". With Vasconcelos, he recorded 
"Duas Vozes" in 1985. In 1989, he recorded "Dança dos Escravos" and in 1990, following 
the release of "Dança das Cabeças", Gismonti toured the United States with his group, 
which included cellist Jaquinho Morelembaum, flutist/saxophonist Nivaldo Ornellas, and 
Edu Mello e Souza on keyboards. Also in 1990, he recorded "Infância", accompanied by Nando 
Carneiro (guitar/keyboards), Zeca Assumpção (bass), and cellist Jaquinho Morelembaum. 
With the same group, he recorded in 1993 Música de Sobrevivência, an album inspired by 
the writings of the brazilian poet Manoel de Barros, who reflects in his work the 
brazilian duality of the cultivated portuguese tradition and the massive illiteracy 
disseminated in that country, which, notwithstanding, deeply influences the official 
language. 
In 1995, he recorded with the State Symphonic Orchestra of Lithuania the CD 
Meeting Point. In 1996, Gismonti recorded with Nando Carneiro and Zeca Assumpção for 
the CD "Zig Zag". 
As a businessman, he owns the successful label Carmo, which has several 
joint ventures with ECM. He also performed an almost impossible task: He bought the 
rights for all of his phonograms through EMI/Odeon for worldwide publishing, with the 
exception of Brazil. However, music continues to be his main focus. In 2009, Gismonti 
released the two disc "Saudacoes" which featured one disc of his seven part composition, 
"Sertões Veredas - Tributo à Miscigenação," and a second disc of guitar duets 
with his son Alexandre Gismonti. 
 
 
  links  
Biography on Wikipedia 
 
 
  video  
Os Alquimistas do Som - by Renato Levi - TV Cultura & TV PUC (2003) 
The documentary provides an overview of experiments in Brazilian Popular Music. 
The MPB evolutionary line is constructed from exclusive testimonials of Brazilian artists like Tom Zé, 
Lenin, Arnaldo Antunes, Egberto Gismonti, Arrigo Barnabé - as well as lyricists as Carlos Rennó and 
conductor Julio Medaglia - and his forays into musical experimentalism (its origins and motivations). 
Comments are illustrated with musical producer Fernando Faro. 
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