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Jaques Morelenbaum

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Wikimp3 information about the music of Jaques Morelenbaum. On our website we have 14 albums and 14 collections of artist Jaques Morelenbaum. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Jaques Morelenbaum represents World Music genres.

Biography

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Former A Barca do Sol member Jaques Morelenbaum participated in Tom Jobim's and Caetano Veloso's Grammy winning albums and has been actively working with Egberto Gismonti, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Cesária Évora, Madredeus, Marisa Monte, Titãs, Skank, Carlinhos Brown, Daniela Mercury, Gabriel o Pensador, Elba Ramalho, Fernanda Abreu, Gal Costa, and many other top artists. Also a member of the Quarteto Jobim/Morelenbaum, formed with Paula Morelenbaum, Paulo Jobim, and Daniel Jobim (respectively, Tom Jobim's son and grandson, all four former members of Jobim's Banda Nova), Morelenbaum has writing music for cinema (including for the award-winning Central do Brasil and Orfeu do Carnaval). Son of conductor Henrique Morelenbaum and piano teacher Sarah Morelenbaum, Jaques Morelenbaum grew up in a highly musical environment, starting to study music at age three. At 12, he took up the cello. Morelenbaum's first professional experience was in the A Barca do Sol group. Having performed under Leonard Bernstein at Tanglewood, he also participated in Jobim's Banda Nova from 1984 to 1994, having already performed live with him in 1985 at a concert at Carnegie Hall. Among his other albums, Morelenbaum participated in the Grammy winning Antonio Brasileiro. After 1988, he also became a sideman for Egberto Gismonti for five years, having taken part in his albums for ECM Infância, Música de Sobrevivência, and Amazônia. Morelenbaum also conduced the Orquestra Sinfônica da Bahia in 1997, played Gimonti pieces, and collaborated with Gismonti on the composition of music for ballets, films, and diverse ensembles. After having participated in the Chico & Caetano TV show (hosted by Chico Buarque and Caetano Veloso), Morelenbaum started to work for Caetano Veloso on his Circuladô (1991), beginning a prolific collaboration with Caetano as instrumentalist, musical director, producer, and arranger, having been responsible for the arrangements and production of the Grammy winner Livro, along with other albums by him. During production on Circuladô, Morelenbaum met Ryuichi Sakamoto, who was also participating on the album, and started collaborating with him, too. In the mid-'90s, Morelenbaum performed in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo at the Free Jazz Festival with ten percussionists of the drum section (bateria) of the Mangueira samba school. With Caetano Veloso, Morelenbaum wrote and produced the soundtracks for the films O Quatrilho (Fábio Barreto), which was nominated for an Oscar in 1995 as Best Foreign Film, and Tieta do Agreste and Orfeu do Carnaval (both by Cacá Diegues). He also co-wrote (with Antônio Pinto) the soundtrack for the film Central do Brasil (by Walter Moreira Salles), which won over 30 international awards and was nominated in 1999 for an Oscar as the Best Foreign Film. That year, Morelenbaum was awarded the Prêmio Sharp in the Best Cinema Soundtrack category.

Collections

Featuring albums

Title: Tempos Diferentes

Artist: Nelson Angelo

Genre: Latin

Title: Three

Artist: Ryuichi Sakamoto

Genre:

Title: Wonderland

Artist: Badi Assad

Genre: World Music, Latin

Title: Jet-Samba

Artist: Marcos Valle

Genre: Jazz, World Music

Title: Magister Giotto

Artist: Various Artists

Genre: Jazz

Title: Mariza

Artist: Mariza

Genre: World Music, Fado

Title: Birdy Heart

Artist: Do Montebello

Genre: Latin

Title: Jazz & Coffe: Vol. 8

Artist: Nelson Faria

Genre: Jazz

Title: Cura

Artist: Jonathan Ferr

Genre: Jazz

Title: Jopara

Artist: Gabriel Grossi

Genre: Latin Folk

Title: Literal

Artist: Marcus Peretto

Genre: Latin Folk

Genres