Gilberto Gil

Gil Luminoso

Gilberto Gil - Gil Luminoso

03/13/2007 | Drg 

Bookmark and Share

All Music Guide Review

Throughout his four-decades-plus career as one of Brazil's most popular singers, Gilberto Gil has restlessly sought new avenues of expression, from the heady and fiery psychedelic Tropicalia of the '60s to his 2002 album of Bob Marley covers, Kaya N'Gan Daya. But there was one thing Gil had never attempted until now, an album spotlighting nothing but his voice and guitar. Gil Luminoso is, by its very nature, one of the most intimate recordings he has ever made and, not surprisingly, one of the loveliest and most moving. Gil's tender, placid voice and understated guitar work project much warmth and soulfulness, and despite the lack of accompaniment it's as whole as any music he's made before. Gil, Brazil's Minister of Culture at the time of this recording, reached into his considerable songbook for 15 songs that would be apropos for solo presentation, and chose material from as far back as the late '60s: romantic, spiritual, political, philosophical. It's quintessential Gil, at his finest, sans help. This CD was nominated for a Grammy award in 2007 for Best Contemporary World Music Album. ~ Jeff Tamarkin, All Music Guide

Gil Luminoso Notes

from DRG Brazil: "In the 1960's, with fellow musician Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil lead the musical and political movement of Tropicala, Brazil's most significant cultural movement since Bossa Nova.

Description: His musical fusion of Bossa Nova, Samba, and other styles was so revolutionary it frightened the country's military dictatorship into arresting him, and Gil was exiled to England by Brazil's military dictatorship and there he absorbed diverse elements of international pop culture which he translated to his own music. He has recorded 52 albums, including a tribute to Bob Marley, titled “Kaya N'Gan Daya” which was released in 2002. For the last four years Gil has served as Brazil's Minister of Culture. “Once I was the stone thrower”, he says referring to his opposition to the dictatorship whose power came to an end in the 1980s, “now I am the glass.”

Credits of Gil Luminoso



Music Download Widget

What's Hot from ARTISTdirect