Gente Nancy Vieira
Album info
Album-Release:
2024
HRA-Release:
22.03.2024
Album including Album cover
- 1 Sol Di Nha Vida 03:16
- 2 Singa 03:51
- 3 Nôve Kretxêu 04:12
- 4 Amor 04:21
- 5 Ta Cundum Cundum 04:36
- 6 Sabu 03:39
- 7 Fidju Grandi 02:48
- 8 Princesa 03:51
- 9 Praia Maria 04:35
- 10 Fado Crioulo 04:35
- 11 Dia Funçon 03:56
- 12 Meditá 04:17
- 13 Rosa Sábi 02:25
- 14 Dona Morna 04:43
Info for Gente
Nancy Vieira’s voice exudes natural warmth like a welcoming breeze. Akin to “morabeza”, a word that expresses the friendliness of Cape Verdan hospitality, the award-winning singer has a new album to celebrate, GENTE. An album that strongly connects and respects the place of Nancy’s childhood, the Cape Verdean islands with the city and country where she now lives and works: Lisbon, Portugal. Songs, stories, dreams and longings are all fully expressed through Nancy Vieira’s captivating voice. All songs on GENTE are performed in Cape Verdean Creole and Portuguese with melodic subtleties and rich harmonic twists.
The songs and music on GENTE are inspired by Cape Verde, the streets of Lisbon and musical
nuances from Brazil, Africa, Europe and the Americas. There's morna and samba, fado, jazz-tinged
sophistication and pop-minded adventure. There are people. There is life. This is fresh-sounding album
made now with tomorrow in mind. Yesterday only matters because it's what brought us all here.
GENTE starts with a celebration of Cape Verdean life on "Sol Di Nha Vida" (My Life Under The Sun).
Inspired by the hybrid of funaná and samba that Kaka Barbosa promoted and called "funamba", "Sol
Di nha Vida" was written by the renowned Mário Lúcio, an artist and composer who explores this
Atlantic meeting of swings and cadences like few other and who is one of the creative forces that
marks GENTE. Says Nancy Vieira of Mário Lúcio, “He is one of the composers who inspires me the
most and one of the greatest Cape Verdean authors/composers of our time".
On the song "Singa" (Balance), Nancy Vieria is joined by an emerging singer and musician from the
West African Guinean music scene, Remna Schwarz, son of the legendary José Carlos Schwarz. In
perfect empathy and with the utmost elegance, Remna combines his distinctive Creole with Nancy's
for this beautiful song as arranged by Jorge Cervantes who also provides all of its instrumentation.
“Singa” is a sweet lament lulled by a melody that is of today and now, but could just as well come from
afar, so classic is its form. Strings intertwine in a fine harmonic tapestry while Nancy's voice soars with
a clarity that is guaranteed.
GENTE, whose title translates from Portuguese for ‘People’ – brings together Cape Verdean musicians,
singers and writers with some of Portugal’s finest musicians and producers. Produced by Amélia Muge,
António José Martins and Nancy Vieira herself, GENTE was recorded in Lisbon between the historic
Namouche studio and the Cervantes Estúdio of Jorge Cervantes, a Peruvian musician who plays on
the album as well as providing some of the arrangements. This world, which Nancy Vieira knows so
well because she has travelled the world on stage, also features on this album.
Nancy Vieira was born in Bissau and raised on the Cape Verdean islands of Santiago and São Vicente.
She later moved to Lisbon, capital of fado and pop, to further her musical career and studies, where
she has lived and worked since. Lisbon’s musical influences are very present on GENTE as the working
base for the team of producers and several of the featured musicians: such as percussionist Iuri
Oliveira, a sophisticated driving force behind so much great music that has been released in recent
years; Mário Lúcio, Vaiss Dias and Zé Paris, all living treasures of Cape Verdean music who play
stringed instruments. GENTE also features bassist and master of chordophones, Olmo Marin from the
Basque Country; accordionists Luciano Maia and Gustavo Nunes from Brazil and violinist Denys
Stetsenko from Ukraine. A world of a lot of PEOPLE, indeed.
The songs and music on GENTE also have strong authorship: the renowned Mário Lúcio wrote four of
the collection. There are also songs born from the feathers of Remna Schwarz, Luís Firmino from
Acácia Maior, the great and historic B.Leza, Ano Nobo, José M. Neves and Kaku Alves and Adalberto
S. Betú. Also featured are songs by Alexandre Lenos with Fred Martins, Luís Lima and Vaiss, Teófilo
Chantre and, of course, Amélia Muge. In other words, themes that come from the deep musical
traditions of Cape Verde and also from other generations and countries consolidated by a new
generation already projecting the soul of these islands into the future.
The subtle and rich musical arrangements on GENTE with their swings and harmonies, reflect the
visions of Jorge Cervantes, the Acácia Maior of Luís Firmino and Henrique Silva, fundamental names
of the new generation from Cape Verde and the Lisboetas group Fogo Fogo who have raised the flag
of the new Cape Verdean music ‘funaná’ high or the experienced Mário Lúcio. And there are also other
guests who reflect this multiplicity of experiences and intersections in Nancy's life: António Zambujo
who joins his voice to Nancy's in the beautiful ‘Fado Criolo’, a song in which you can also hear the
spoken cadence of Chullage and the acoustic guitar of Fred Martins, or Miroca Paris who paints ‘Dia
Funçon’ with percussions.
GENTE follows on from Nancy Vieira’s 2018 release ‘Manhã Florida’. There are many people involved
on GENTE, an album that avoids the easy path of technological touches of "modernity" and prefers, in
its apparent formal traditionalism, to promote the particular magic that only happens when people from
different walks of life meet in the same space to share, play and sing their different stories. There's so
much of Cape Verde on this album, it runs in Nancy’s veins to the point she is often referred to as the
heiress of Cesária Évora, one of her strongest muses.
Nancy Vieira truly represents a new generation of Cape Verdean artists. In 2019, she won two Cape
Verde Music Awards: Best Traditional Song and Best Female Interpreter. Nancy was the participating
singer in the celebration of the consecration of the music of Morna as a Cultural Intangible Heritage of
Humanity by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Nancy
Veiria has become known and loved as singer with a direct, open voice and world view, very much at
home in the world of international Portuguese-speaking cultures. Nancy Vieira’s national and
international tours are organised through the leading Portuguese booking agency Uguru Music.
GENTE is a work of encounters, stories, ideas, but above all, of people. The first two singles from
GENTE, "Sol Di Nha Vida" (My Life Under The Sun) and “Singa” (Balance) represent the album’s
moods perfectly. GENTE is a work that was conceived slowly thoughout, discussed and meticulously
planned, and is being released on 15 March 2024 internationally through Germany’s Galileo MC
record label.
Nancy Vieira, vocals
Iúri Oliveira, percussion
Jorge Cervantes, bass
Luciano Maia, accordion
Olmo Marin, guitar
Vaiss, guitar
Nancy Vieira
was born in 1975 in Bissau, where her parents had joined the leader of the struggle for independence in Cape Verde and Guinea Bissau, Amilcar Cabral. Cabral was assassinated in 1973, just before Portugal’s colonial period ended with the Carnation Revolution in April 1974. Cape Verde gained independence in 1975. Four months after Nancy’s birth, the Vieira family moved to Praia, Cape Verde’s new capital on Santiago, one of the archipelago’s ten islands. Born to this newly-won liberty, she would acquire a strong sense of identity on her political and artistic journey. Her father, an amateur musician, guitarist and violinist, became Minister of Transport and Communication in the new government. Ten years later, he returned to Mindelo, the busy, metropolitan port on the island of São Vicente, where he acted as the governor of the Barlavento Islands (the “windward”, northern islands).
When Nancy was fourteen, her father was appointed Cape-Verdean ambassador to Portugal, “which took in the French representation, so he went to present his letters of credence to President François Mitterrand,” explains the young woman, who has lived in Lisbon ever since. Nancy studied management and sociology at the University of Lisbon. One evening, she accompanied a friend to a song contest he had entered. Heard humming along, she was asked to sing and performed B. Leza’s Lua Nha Testemunha for the judges. She won. The prize was the chance to record an album for the now defunct Disco Norte label. The record was called Nos Raça (1996). Taking the time she needed to have a daughter and look after her, Nancy only released her second album, Segred, eight years later in 2004, then Lus came out in 2007. In 2011, Nancy worked with pianist and artistic director Nando Andrade and released No Amá, the album that revealed her to an international audience. The record won over music lovers orphaned by Cesaria Evora, from Poland to Greece, the Baltic States to Italy, and the Netherlands to Russia.
In the days of Portuguese colonial rule, São Vicente secondary school was an intellectual melting pot attended by the poet, morna writer and brilliant politician Amilcar Cabral. Nancy Vieira studied there too, absorbing the background sounds of the port of Mindelo: the Brazilians, Maria Bethania, Caetano Veloso and Angela Maria, fado, mornas, coladeras, British pop, Cuban rumba and so on.
Mindelo was the scene of this musical fusion and home to Cesaria Evora (1941-2011). Herculano Vieira, Nancy’s father, had been a captain in the merchant navy and had played with Cesaria in his youth, “before the struggle,” says Nancy. “I found that out in June 2011 when I was recording my album in Mindelo. It was the first time I’d been to see Cesaria at her home and she asked me, ‘How is Herculano?’ I found that moving. He’d never said a word about it.”
Nancy is not precisely akin to Cesaria Evora, although their repertoires and musical associations definitely coincide. Their styles are different, though. Nancy Vieira’s voice is direct and clear compared to the sultry heat of the “Barefoot Diva”. The two have little in common in terms of personality, social background and life story. Yet what connects them is the secret affinity of Cape Verdeans for their music, which straddles the West and Africa: a music of ocean crossings and Creole culture.
This album contains no booklet.