Eumir_Deodato

Eumir Deodato

Eumir Deodato

Brazilian pianist, composer, arranger and producer


Eumir Deodato de Almeida (Brazilian Portuguese: [ẽwˈmiʁ deoˈdatu]; born 22 June 1943)[2] is a Brazilian pianist, composer, arranger and record producer, primarily in jazz but who has been known for his eclectic melding of genres, such as pop, rock, disco, rhythm and blues, classical, Latin and bossa nova.[3]

Quick Facts Background information, Birth name ...

Deodato has arranged and produced more than 500 records for acts such as Frank Sinatra, Roberta Flack, Björk and Christophe, as well as produced Kool & the Gang's hits "Celebration", "Ladies' Night" and "Too Hot".[4]

Deodato was nominated for three Grammy Awards and won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Performance in 1974 for "Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)." The song peaked at number 2 on the weekly Billboard Hot 100 in March 1973.[5] It reached number 3 in Canada and number 7 on the British charts.[6][7]

Biography

Deodato, born in Rio De Janeiro on June 22, 1943, began his musical life on accordion when he was 12 years old, and then piano two years later. He studied orchestration, conducting and arranging. He played bossa nova in bands with Paulo Silvino and Orlandivo, then formed his own band, which featured João Palma, Sergio Barroso, Ugo Marotta, Henri Ackselrud and guitarist Celso Brando, who was later replaced by Roberto Menescal in 1962. Eumir’s paternal grandfather was a marble craftsman from Custonaci, Sicily.[8]

Career

Recording career

Deodato often plays the Fender Rhodes electric piano. He became successful as a keyboard player in the 1970s. Since then, he has produced and arranged music on more than 500 albums for artists such as Kool & the Gang, Con Funk Shun, Björk, Christophe, Ithamara Koorax and k.d. lang. Guitarist John Tropea and flautist Hubert Laws appeared on his early albums.

Prelude, his first album in the U.S., was released in 1973.[9] His track Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001) gained big hit in Billboard pop chart. This album was crossover music style that attracted a large audience and was produced by Creed Taylor for his label CTI. The album sold 5 million copies worldwide and earned Deodato the 1974 Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Performance for the track Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001) as well as a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist.[3]

His second album, Deodato 2, reached number 19 on the Billboard album chart, and the single "Rhapsody in Blue" reached No. 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1973.[10] His interpretation of Pavane pour une infante défunte ("Pavane for a Dead Princess") by Maurice Ravel was used in the 1970s by an Australian television station as background music.

In 1978, he had an orchestral hit with "Whistle Bump" from the LP titled Love Island. The track promoted the widespread use of whistles in nightclubs at the time. However, his popularity in the discos was solidified when he released the 1979 single Night Cruiser from the album of the same name, which earned him a third Grammy nomination for Best R&B Instrumental Performance.[11] Deodato continued recording through the 1980s. In 1985, he had two hits, "S.O.S., Fire in the Sky" and "Are You For Real", on Billboard magazine's top 20 Dance chart.[12]

In 1998, Deodato invited his old friend and fellow Brazilian jazz impresario Arnaldo DeSouteiro to co-produce with him the first official CD reissues of all his albums from the 1960s, in a total of nine releases. Among them, Inútil Paisagem (reissued by JSR in co-production with Universal Music), Idéias, and all the albums from the Os Catedráticos series that were digitally remixed and remastered by audio engineer Rodrigo de Castro Lopes under the direct supervision of both Deodato and DeSouteiro.

He recorded Live in Rio in 2007. In 2009, Prelude was reissued for the first time in Asia on SACD and SHM-CD formats under the supervision of Arnaldo DeSouteiro. In 2011, he released the album The Crossing, which he produced with Lino Nicolosi and Pino Nicolosi at Nicolosi Productions, with guest vocalist Al Jarreau. In 2010 he played the rhodes piano in the album Oasis produced and performed by Marita Pauli. In 2018 he arranged and conducted the strings orchestra in the album The First released by Riccardo Dalli Cardillo.

Arranging and producing

Since the 1960s, Deodato has been in demand as a producer and arranger. He has worked on more than 500 albums, and 15 have reached platinum status as defined by the RIAA.

In the early 1960s, he worked as a freelance arranger for Odeon Records. He wrote arrangements for Wilson Simonal, Marcos Valle, Leny Andrade, Pery Ribeiro, Tito Madi and for his own debut album, Inútil Paisagem (1964),[3] which was dedicated to the work of Antônio Carlos Jobim and recorded in Rio when Deodato was 22. Jobim praised him in the album's liner notes. Deodato played piano with guitarists Oscar Castro-Neves and Roberto Menescal, drummer Juquinha and an all-star cast including Copinha, J.T. Meirelles, Cipó, Paulo Moura.[13] He has been credited for helping to start the career of Milton Nascimento; Deodato was part of a committee tasked with choosing songs for a festival and chose three by Nascimento.[3]

He moved to New York City in 1967 to work with guitarist Luiz Bonfá, with whom he recorded seven albums and countless jingles. Bonfá also introduced him to vocalist Astrud Gilberto and record producer Creed Taylor, when they were reunited on the making of Astrud's "Beach Samba" album for Verve Records. Later on, Creed Taylor hired him to write arrangements for musicians at CTI Records who included Wes Montgomery, Antônio Carlos Jobim, Milton Nascimento, Walter Wanderley, Stanley Turrentine, Paul Desmond and the CTI All Stars. Deodato also recorded with Frank Sinatra, (1969), João Donato (1970), Youg, Holt Unlimited (1973), Aretha Franklin (1973), and recorded three albums with Roberta Flack from 1971 to 1973.

He had other collaborations, including producing four million-selling albums for Kool and the Gang from 1979 to 1982, the first solo album by Kevin Rowland of Dexys Midnight Runners in 1988, three albums four singer Ithamara Koorax, as well as records by Chuck Mangione, Larry Graham, Tania Maria, Eliane Elias, Pretty Poison, One Way, Con Funk Shun, Brenda K. Starr, Kleeer, and kd Lang. Deodato also developed a close collaboration with Iceladinc singer Bjork from 1996 to 1998, arranging her albums Post, Telegram and Homogenic. For Deodato's Love Island, he and Maurice White co-wrote the instrumental "Tahiti Hut", which (with lyrics added to it) was later recorded by the band Switch with guest vocals by Jermaine Jackson.

Deodato wrote orchestral arrangements for the films The Gentle Rain (with original soundtrack by Luiz Bonfá in 1965), and ""The Adventurers" (with soundtrack by Antonio Carlos Jobim and additional score by Deodato in 1969), as well as the original soundtracks for ""Target Risk", "The Reporter", The Black Pearl (1977), The Onion Field (1979), ""Beat Street (1980) and Bossa Nova (2000), among many others. He also produced and arranged for the movies "Body Rock" and "The Ghostbusters II".

Personal life

His daughter Kennya Deodato (b. 1968) is married to actor Stephen Baldwin.[14] His granddaughter Hailey Bieber is married to Canadian singer Justin Bieber.[15] From 1963 to current day, Eumir Deodato is married to Ruth Deodato.

Discography

Albums

More information Year, Album ...

As sideman

With Luiz Bonfá

  • The Bonfa Magic (Milestone, 1993)
  • Jacaranda (Ranwood, 1973; reissued JSR, 1998)
  • Black Orpheus Impressions (Dot, 1968; reissued Sony, 2000)
  • Luiz Bonfá Plays Great Songs (Dot, 1967)
  • Steve & Eydie, Bonfa & Brazil (Columbia, 1968)

With Astrud Gilberto

With Antônio Carlos Jobim

  • The Daventurers - Original Soundtrack (Paramount, 1969)
  • Stone Flower (CTI, 1970)
  • Tide (A&M/CTI, 1970)
  • Antonio Carlos Jobim's Finest Hour (Verve, 2000)

With Kool & the Gang

  • Ladies' Night (De-Lite, 1979)
  • Celebration (De-Lite, 1980)
  • Something Special (De-Lite, 1981)
  • As One (De-Lite, 1982)

With Ithamara Koorax

  • Ithamara Koorax Sings the Luiz Bonfa Songbook (Paddle Wheel, 1996)
  • Exclusively For My Friends (BCE, 1999)
  • Serenade in Blue (Milestone, 2000)

With Roberto Menescal

  • A Nova Bossa Nova (Elenco, 1965)
  • The Boy from Ipanema Beach (Kapp, 1965)
  • Bossa Nova (Odeon, 1965)
  • A Bossa Nova De Roberto Menescal (Elenco, 1964)

With Milton Nascimento

  • Courage (A&M/CTI, 1969)
  • Clube Da Esquina (EMI, 1972)

With Frank Sinatra

  • Sinatra & Company (Reprise, 1971) (side one arrangements)

With Brenda K. Starr

  • Brenda K. Starr (MCA, 1987)
  • By Heart (Epic, 1991)

With Stanley Turrentine

With Marcos Valle

  • Braziliance! (Warner Bros., 1966)
  • Samba '68 (Verve, 1968)

With others

Singles

More information Year, Single (A-side / B-side) ...

References

  1. Best of Deadato Retrieved 19 February 2024
  2. Neder, Alvaro. "Deodato". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  3. Hanson, Amy. "Ladies' Night". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  4. Feldman, Christopher (2000). Billboard Book of Number 2 Singles. Watson-Guptill. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-8230-7695-6.
  5. "Deodato". officialcharts.com. Official Charts.
  6. "Deodato allo Spasimo dirige l' Orchestra jazz - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian). 30 August 2007. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  7. Desouteiro, Arnaldo (30 September 2013). "40 Years of Eumir Deodato's iconic "Prelude"". Jazz Station. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  8. "Deodato – Awards". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 18 July 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  9. Neder, Alvaro. "Inutil Paisagem". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  10. Faber, Judy (5 September 2006). "Stephen Baldwin: Born Again". CBS News. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  11. "Deodato". billboard.com. Billboard.
  12. Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 87. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.

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