Edu Lobo - SERGIO MENDES PRESENTS LOBO - Latin Jazz 1973 A&M

Sold Date: February 5, 2024
Start Date: August 19, 2023
Final Price: $19.99 (USD)
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Original issue 1973 (might be 1971, no dates on album), gate fold, double record. Records look very clean, no issues. I have not tested, no scratches seen. 
Please look at all photos, they are part of the discription. 



Product Description
Personnel: Edu Lobo (vocals, guitar); Gracinha Leporace (vocals); Oscar Castro-Neves (guitar); Ron Cooper, Ray Kramer, Kurt Reher, Eleanor Slatkin (cello); Hermeto Pascoal (flute, acoustic & electric pianos); Norman Herzberg (bassoon); Sebastiao Neto (bass); Claudio Slon (drums); Airto Moreira (percussion).
Producer: Sergio Mendes.
Recorded in 1970. Includes liner notes by Leonard Feather.

Edu Lobo is (unjustly) one of the least-celebrated of the major songwriting lions of the first Brazilian wave, and a talented performer in his own right -- which his first North American album makes stunningly clear. Painstakingly produced by one of Lobo's most persistent advocates, Sergio Mendes, the album overflows with cunningly devised, first-class tunes like "Ponteio," "To Say Goodbye," the marathon "Crystal Illusions," "Casa Forte," and the irresistible "Jangada." Some have Portuguese lyrics, some are in English, but others simply use sharp scatted syllables, an art at which the low-key but nimble-tongued Lobo excels. The material is so strong that one wonders why the Beatles' "Hey Jude" had to be added to the lineup (presumably in an attempt [failed] to attract a wider audience for the record). The backings strip the base of Sergio Mendes' Brasil '66 sound down to its rhythm section, fortified by the playful and enigmatic electric piano and flute multiphonics of Hermeto Pascoal (who also had a big hand in the arrangements), Airto Moreira's multifaceted percussion talents, and an occasional cello quartet. Collectors of Brazilian jazz should seek this one out; it is absolutely essential. ~ Richard S. Ginell