[ Arc / CD ]
Release Date: Thursday 1 August 2013
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The unrivaled queen of the Portuguese fado, singer Amália Rodrigues was born in Lisbon's Alfama district in 1920; one of ten children, she was abandoned by her mother at the age of one and raised by her grandmother, spending her formative years selling produce on the streets and working as a seamstress. Against the wishes of her family, as a teen Rodrigues performed as a tango dancer, and at 19 she made her professional singing debut alongside her sister, Celeste, at the fashionable Lisbon nightspot Retiro da Severa.
Within a year she was a star, selling out clubs every night; in 1944, she traveled to Brazil, drawing huge crowds during her stay at the Copacabana Casino and later returning to Rio de Janeiro to make her first recordings. Rodrigues not only popularized the fado throughout South America, she reinvented it -- brilliantly fusing the urban and rural styles of Lisbon and Coimbra, she also sought out material that moved far beyond the traditional tales of failed romance to explore instead the deepest crises of the soul and spirit, delivering performances unmatched in their fatalistic power and haunting beauty. Rodrigues died October 6, 1999, at the age of 79; upon receiving news of her passing, Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Guterres ordered three days of national mourning, declaring her "the Voice of Portugal."
The title doesn't lie - she is totally the queen of fado. Her amazing voice soars across songs of melancholia, fate and loss in the distinct Portuguese style, never missing a beat. This is a brilliant collection of her finest moments. (Reb and Ella's World Music School)
Alfredo Marceneiro: Maldicao (Curse)
Armando Goes: Interior Triste (Sad Soul)
Alfredo Marceneiro: Ha Festa na Mouraria (Feast in Mouraria)
Nobrega e Sousa: Triste Sina (Sad Fate)
Joao Silva Tavares: Ceu da Mina Rua (Heaven of My Street)
Frederico de Brito: Antigamente (In the Past)
Traditional: Libertacao (Release)
Charles Aznavour: Ay! Mourir Pour Toi (Oh! To Die For You)
Tomas Mendez: Gorrioncillo pecho amarillo (Yellow Breasted Sparrow)
Joao Nobre: Esquina do Pecado (Corner of Sin)
Joao Nobre: Campinos do Ribatejo (Horseman from Ribatejo)
Anibal Nazare: A Chave da Minha Porta (The Key to My Door)
Jaime Santos: Lar Portugues (Portuguese Home)
Jose Galhardo: Faz Hoje um Ano (One Year Ago)
Ay! Mourir Pour Toi (Oh! To Die For You)
Sapateiro da Bica: Fado Final (Final Fado)