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Inédito / Inedito

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Download links and information about Inédito / Inedito by Antonio Carlos Jobim. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to World Music, Latin, Bossanova genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:09:30 minutes.

Artist: Antonio Carlos Jobim
Release date: 1997
Genre: World Music, Latin, Bossanova
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:09:30
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Wave 2:48
2. Chega de Saudade 3:53
3. Sabiá 3:19
4. Samba Do Avião 3:24
5. Garota de Ipanema 4:02
6. Retrato Em Branco e Preto 2:05
7. Modinho (Seresta No. 5) 2:53
8. Modinha 2:14
9. Canta, Canta Mais 3:58
10. Eu Não Existo Sem Você 2:43
11. Por Causa de Você 2:24
12. Sucedeu Assim 2:32
13. Imagina 1:51
14. Eu Sei Que Vou Te Amar 1:52
15. Canção Do Amor Demais 1:41
16. Falando de Amor 3:52
17. Inútil Paisagem 2:47
18. Derradeira Primavera 2:18
19. Canção Em Modo Menor 2:21
20. Estrada Do Sol 3:12
21. Águas de Março 3:35
22. Samba de Uma Nota Só 3:00
23. Desafinado 2:55
24. A Felicidade 3:51

Details

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As a celebration of "Tom" Jobim's 60th birthday in 1987, a Brazilian consort simply called the Organization sponsored an album that anthologized his output as a composer. Jobim made the final choices of 24 tunes, recorded them with his band of family and friends, and the results were released privately in a limited edition. Recorded at around the same time as Passarim, it's possible that Jobim did not want this retrospective to compete with his new material. Not until 1995 did the Brazilian arm of BMG put out a commercial edition of this project in a very handsome two-CD box with a beautifully illustrated 38-page color booklet (alas, the contents could have been easily squeezed onto only one CD). It's far from a casual project, obviously carefully rehearsed and polished; rather it's an intimate one, using a minimum of resources, backed only by Jobim's simply-stated piano on several tracks. There is the expected quota of greatest hits like "Desafinado," "One Note Samba," "Chega de Saudades," and "Wave," yet the bulk of the material is not very familiar, often dispatched in to-the-point slices that sometimes clock in at less than two minutes. Jobim also takes a personal flyer by including his countryman Heitor Villa-Lobos' haunting "Seresta No. 5," with just himself on piano backing Danilo Caymmi's vocal, followed by his own "Modinha." Jaques Morelenbaum provides the occasional string arrangements and cello solos, again keeping things uncluttered and decidedly less ambitious than Claus Ogerman's charts on a previous Jobim retrospective, Terra Brasilis. Sometimes the arrangements are unpredictable; "The Girl From Ipanema" omits the words of the first chorus, picking up the thread on the bridge, and the stunning "Estrada do Sol" shifts gears several times. The feeling of saudade is very much front and center on Jobim's birthday present to himself — he later said that this was his favorite album — and all of his connoisseurs should try to hunt it down in the import bins. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi