Cesaria Evora, “Besame Mucho”

Cesaria Evora, “Besame Mucho”

A native of the island nation of Cape Verde, Cesaria Evora was known as the country’s foremost practitioner of the morna, which is strongly associated with the islands and combines West African percussion with Portuguese fados, Brazilian modhinas, and British sea shanties. She began singing morna at age 16 after meeting an attractive young guitarist. Her talent soon had her performing all over the islands, and in the late ‘60s two of her radio tapes were released as albums in the Netherlands and Portugal, respectively.

However, Cesaria Evora never left her country, and gave up singing in the mid-’70s owing to lack of profit. In 1985, at the age of 45, she decided to return to music and traveled to Portugal to record two songs for an anthology of female Cape Verdean singers. This led to subsequent recording sessions in Paris, which resulted in four albums from 1988 to 1992.

Her international fame grew, and Evora toured Europe, Africa, Brazil, and Canada, with stops in the United States to perform for Cape Verdean audiences. In the fall of 1995, she mounted her first large-scale American tour; subsequent recordings include 1997’s “Cabo Verde” and 1999′s “Mar Azul” and “Cafe Atlantico”.

One of my favorite singers. Seek out her music. She was a true star.

Cesaria Evora and Marisa Monte, “E Doce Morrer no Mar”

Cesaria Evora and Marisa Monte, “E Doce Morrer no Mar”

This is a song written by Dorival Caymi who lived on the Bahia coast of Brazil.
The song tells the story of a fisherman who goes out to sea at night and dies, leaving his wife alone at home. His wife suffers with grief but thinks

“Doce more no mar, nas ondas verdes do mar.” (It is a sweet, graceful way to die, die in the green waves of the sea).

Uma música por dois classe mundial de cantores cujo vozes iluminar meu dia.

Cesaria Evora, “Besame Mucho”

Cesaria Evora, “Besame Mucho”

A song from one of the Great Singers:

I want to have you close to me
To see myself in your eyes
To see you next to me
Think that perhaps tomorrow
I will be far
So far away from you

Kiss me, kiss me a lot
As if tonight were
The last time

Kiss me, kiss me a lot
For I am afraid of having you
And losing you all over again.

Cesaria Evora, “Carnaval De Sao Vicente”

 

Cesaria Evora, “Carnaval De Sao Vicente”- Live Recording, Paris, France

Cesária Évora was a Cape Verdean popular singer. Nicknamed the “Barefoot Diva” for performing without shoes, she was also known as the “Queen of Morna”. She performed for audiences for over fifty years, delighting her listeners and getting them up dancing. Cesaria Evora sings this tribute to her hometown of Mindelo. From the album, “Cafe Atlantico”, 1999. If she is new to you, find another song and then another.