HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentTribute: Who was Astrud Gilberto, the Brazilian vocalist who didn’t get her due?

Tribute: Who was Astrud Gilberto, the Brazilian vocalist who didn’t get her due?

Gracefully she dealt with an exploitative and misogynist music industry in the 1960s, one that was yet to come to terms with women’s liberation. Most of all was the American saxophonist Stan Getz, the insecure bully who claimed her as his discovery.

June 11, 2023 / 09:29 IST
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Astrud Gilberto, the Brazilian vocalist who passed away aged 83 this week, will be best remembered for taking Brazilian bossa nova to US shores with her vocals on 1964 classic The Girl From Ipanema. But the singer, producer and one-time actor’s influence goes beyond that singular song and genre. Her breathy, icy cool vocal style presaged the sophisti-pop singing of Sade and Everything But The Girl, and earned adoration from the likes of George Michael and Polish jazz-pop star Basia. Perhaps, her most enduring legacy is the grace and strength with which she dealt with an exploitative and misogynist music industry yet to come to terms with women’s liberation.

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She was born as Astrud Evangelina Weinert in the Brazilian state of Bahia in 1940, to a German linguistics professor father and a Brazilian educator mother. Her father was a painter in his free time, and practically everyone on her mother’s side of the family could play an instrument. Young Astrud was also musically inclined, and in her teens she started hanging out with a gang of musician friends in Rio De Janeiro which included future pop star Nara Leão and her to-be husband João Gilberto, a pioneer of the newly emerging bossa nova genre.

Astrud and João married in 1959, just as the latter’s career was taking off. When he was invited to record with legendary American saxophonist Stan Getz in New York in 1963, Astrud tagged along, helping out as a studio translator. During the recording session for The Girl From Ipanema — written by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes, with English lyrics by Norman Gimbel — producer Creed Taylor was scrambling to find someone to sing the English lyrics so he could call it a day. Someone — it’s not entirely clear who, though Astrud says it was her husband João — suggested that she do it. Astrud had already been singing privately to a small circle of musicians and friends, and though nervous, she agreed.