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Astrud Gilberto, ‘The Girl From Ipanema’ Singer, Dies at 83

It was the first song she ever recorded. And it played a key role in making the Brazilian sound known as bossa nova a phenomenon in the United States.

Astrud Gilberto, whose soft and sexy vocal performance on “The Girl From Ipanema,” the first song she ever recorded, helped make the sway of Brazilian bossa nova a hit sound in the United States in the 1960s, died on Monday. She was 83.

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Her death was confirmed by Paul Ricci, a musician and a family friend, who said that Ms. Gilberto’s son Marcelo had authorized him to announce it. He provided no further details.

Ms. Gilberto enjoyed a four-decade recording career, cutting albums with celebrated musicians like Gil Evans, Stanley Turrentine and James Last as well as working with George Michael and others. But her biggest success came with “The Girl From Ipanema,” written by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes, with English lyrics by Norman Gimbel, which she sang on record with the American jazz saxophonist Stan Getz.

When Ms. Gilberto recorded that song, she was married to João Gilberto, the Brazilian singer and guitarist often referred to as the father of the bossa nova. In 1963, the two of them traveled from Rio de Janeiro to New York City, where he was set to record a joint album with Mr. Getz, who had already released three albums that mixed jazz with samba and bossa nova.

Exactly who had the idea to involve Ms. Gilberto, an untested singer, on the album, later released as “Getz/Gilberto,” is unclear. Some credit its producer, Creed Taylor; others credit Ms. Gilberto. The singer herself credited her husband.

“While rehearsing with Stan,” Ms. Gilberto said in a 2002 interview for her official website, “João casually asked me to join in and sing a chorus in English after he had just sung the first chorus in Portuguese.”

“Stan was very receptive, in fact very enthusiastic,” she continued. “I’ll never forget that while we were listening back to the just recorded song at the studio’s control room, Stan said to me, with a very dramatic expression, ‘This song is going to make you famous.’”

It helped that the version of the song released as a single in 1964 featured only Ms. Gilberto’s vocal and not her husband’s. With her sweetly wistful voice to guide it, the record shot to No 5 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart and went on to sell more than a million copies. It won the Grammy Award for record of the year, and the album that contained it, which included one other vocal track from Ms. Gilberto, snagged three Grammys, including album of the year. It was the first album by a jazz artist to earn that distinction and one of only two to ever do so. (Herbie Hancock’s “River: The Joni Letters,” more than 40 years later, was the second.)

“The Girl From Ipanema” became one of the most-covered songs in pop music history. It has been featured in more than 50 films, many of them using the original Getz-Gilberto version.

Ms. Gilberto’s whispery voice, though limited in range and power, had a genuine ache and mystery to it, as well as the ability to evoke images of summers imagined or lost. “Her languid, affectless voice floated as lazily as a leaf on the Carioca breeze,” the journalist and author James Gavin wrote in the liner notes for the 2001 collection “Astrud Gilberto Gold.” “One could almost hear the surf breaking and the sea gulls crying as she sang.”

Mr. Getz understood her appeal immediately. “When I first heard Astrud,” he told a British journalist in 1964, “I thought there was something innocent and demure in her voice — such an opposite to these chesty-voiced girls singing rock ’n’ roll.”

Her breathy brand of singing influenced scores of later artists, among them Sade; Tracey Thorn, of the duo Everything but the Girl; and Basia, who acknowledged that influence by writing a song titled “Astrud.”

“Getz/Gilberto,” which contained “The Girl From Ipanema,” won the Grammy Award for album of the year. “The Girl From Ipanema” was named record of the year.

Astrud Evangelina Weinert was born on March 29, 1940, in Bahia, Brazil, to a German father, Fritz Weinert, a language professor, and a Brazilian mother, Evangelina Weinert, who was also an educator.

When Astrud was a girl, her family moved to Rio. There, during her teenage years, she befriended a group of young musicians who later became celebrated in Brazil, among them the singer Nara Leão and the songwriter Roberto Menescal. She met Mr. Gilberto when she was 19, and they married several months later.

She began singing in private with her musical circle of friends, which grew to include more established names like Luiz Bonfá and Vinicius de Moraes. It was Mr. Moraes who wrote the original lyrics for “The Girl From Ipanema,” named after a beachside neighborhood in Rio where he and Mr. Jobim used to watch a beautiful woman they pined for walk by.

After the song became a smash hit, Mr. Getz and Mr. Taylor, the producer, described Ms. Gilberto in the press as a housewife they had discovered — a characterization that angered her, given the years she had spent privately singing with her friends and her husband. “I can’t help but to feel annoyed at the fact that they resorted to lying,” she said in the interview on her website.

She was also experiencing tension in her marriage and soon began a brief, fraught affair with Mr. Getz. (She and her husband divorced shortly after.) She toured the United States with Mr. Getz, billed as a guest singer; the resulting live album, “Getz Au Go Go” (1964), featured her on five tracks.

The success of that album led to a solo contract with Verve Records, Mr. Getz’s label. “The Astrud Gilberto Album,” released in 1965, just missed Billboard’s pop Top 40. For her third album, “Look to the Rainbow” (1966), she expanded her sound by working with the arranger Gil Evans, best known for his work with Miles Davis.

While her music was respectfully received by American pop critics, Ms. Gilberto never earned a parallel response from critics in Brazil, who felt that she had lucked into her career. As a result, Ms. Gilberto, who had emigrated to America in the mid-1960s, performed in her native country only once.

(Nevertheless, “The Girl From Ipanema” was popular enough in Brazil that it was performed at the opening ceremony of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro by Daniel Jobim, the composer’s grandson, as the model Gisele Bündchen walked across the stage and the audience sang along.)

She also complained of being treated poorly by her record company. “There was a problem collecting what was mine,” she told The New York Times in 1981. “I was doing a great deal of producing of my own albums. I got no credit.”

Ms. Gilberto in concert in 1985. She began to expand her scope in the 1980s by writing her own material.Jazz Archiv Hamburg/ullstein bild via Getty Images

After releasing eight albums for Verve, Ms. Gilberto signed in 1971 with Creed Taylor’s label, CTI Records, and recorded an album with the saxophonist Stanley Turrentine.

In the 1980s, she recorded with the James Last Orchestra and began to expand her scope by writing her own material. In 1996, she sang a duet with George Michael on “Desafinado” for the album “Red Hot + Rio,” whose profits went to benefit AIDS-related causes. In 2002, she released her final album, “Jungle,” and retired from public performances. Six years later, she received a Latin Grammy Award for lifetime achievement.

In addition to Marcelo Gilberto, her son from her first marriage, Ms. Gilberto is survived by another son, Gregory Lasorsa, from her second marriage, to Nicholas Lasorsa, which ended in divorce, and two granddaughters. Both her sons are musicians who often worked with her. João Gilberto died in 2019.

In an interview included in the liner notes for a reissue of “Getz/Gilberto” in 1996, Ms. Gilberto marveled at the impact her first recording had in the United States. “Americans are generally not very curious about the styles of other countries,” she said. “But our music was Brazilian music in a modern form.”

She added that she thought the timing also had something to do with the song’s breakthrough, just after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

“People needed some romance,” she said, “something dreamy for distraction.”

Audio produced by Kate Winslett.

Source: Music - nytimes.com


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