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João Gilberto
Brazil bossa nova 1960s ▶ 10K subscribers

João Gilberto

João Gilberto was the Brazilian guitarist, singer, and composer widely hailed as the father of bossa nova. His hushed voice and gently syncopated guitar reshaped how the world hears Brazilian music, earning him the nickname "O Mito" — the myth — at home.

Origins

Born João Gilberto do Prado Pereira de Oliveira in Brazil, he emerged in the late 1950s as the pioneering figure of a new genre. By stripping samba down to an intimate, conversational style, he helped launch bossa nova as a movement that quickly spread far beyond Brazil.

The sound

His sound is defined by restraint: a soft, almost murmured vocal delivery set against the subtle, off-kilter pulse of his nylon-string guitar. That understated swing became the blueprint for bossa nova and influenced jazz and popular music around the globe.

Legacy

In 1965 his album Getz/Gilberto became the first jazz record to win the Grammy for Album of the Year, also taking Best Instrumental and Best Engineered honors. He later won a Grammy in the Best World Music Album category for João voz e violão, cementing a legacy as one of the most quietly revolutionary musicians of the 20th century.

Signature song

Chega de Saudade

"Chega de Saudade" is often considered the song that launched bossa nova, and Gilberto's recording of it captures the genre's essence — tender, spare, and rhythmically irresistible.

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