Mundo Mariza

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
09.09.2016

Label: Parlophone / Warner

Genre: World Music

Subgenre: Latin

Artist: Mariza

Composer: Mário Pacheco, Tiago Machado, Javier Limón, Luis José Martins, Pedro Da Silva Martins, Miguel Gameiro, Vlu, Florian Aguilar, Jorge Fernando, Fontes Rocha, Pedro Joia, Paulo de Carvalho, Rui Veloso

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1 Rio de Mágoa 03:16
  • 2 Melhor de Mim 04:07
  • 3 Alma 03:11
  • 4 Saudade Solta 03:30
  • 5 Sem Ti 04:58
  • 6 Maldição 04:47
  • 7 Padoce de Céu Azul 03:49
  • 8 Caprichosa 02:35
  • 9 Paixão 02:59
  • 10 Anda o Sol Na Minha Rua 02:26
  • 11 Adeus 02:54
  • 12 Missangas 03:37
  • 13 Sombra 03:50
  • 14 Meu Amor Pequenino 02:29
  • Total Runtime 48:28

Info for Mundo

For many of those outside of Portugal their introduction to the deep and complex musical genre known as Fado was through Mariza whose musical career has marked her out as the most successful and widest-reaching of any Fado singer since the late Amália Rodrigues. In the 14 years since her debut album she has travelled the world performing at some of the most prestigious venues, performing with some of the biggest names, supported by some of the most well known orchestras while her records have gone on to sell over one million copies worldwide attracting over 30 Platinum awards.

That envious track record has kept her fans keen for more and now the wait is nearly over with the announcement that she is to release her sixth studio recording and her first of entirely new material in five years. The album called Mundo (World) is in many ways a reflection of the journey she has been on and, from reading the press release, a new beginning. Throughout the press release are hints about its diverse and contemporary approach… “because Fado is always in Mariza’s voice, it’s always there even when it doesn’t conform to its traditional image….Mariza’s Fado is a different, adventurous Fado that expands beyond the Portuguese borders in search of a new cosmopolitan identity. A new beginning, if you like…”

Many of the songs featured on Mundo were written specifically for Mariza’s voice. Among the exceptions are a cover version of a 1930 tango originally sung by Carlos Gardel; one Fado made famous by Amália Rodrigues and another created by the legendary Alfredo Marceneiro; and a Cape Verdian “morna”.

That ‘new cosmopolitan identity’ she seeks to build in Mundo will unravel like “a travelogue, a diary, a record of a journey, from Cape Verde to Spain, from Argentina to Portugal….a world that has grown in the past five years, enriched by new landscapes, new places, new people, new influences.”

The new album is a more modern-sounding fado record in contrast to her last one in 2010, “Fado Tradicional”. Some of the songs on the new album are in Spanish which, she admitted, were not as easy to sing as you may guess. The Spanish language is a much harder, edgier language than the Portuguese.

The beautiful “Caprichosa” for example originated from a listening session in the middle of the night. Mariza was looking for a Tango that speaks about Portugal and had a Portuguese story to it. “Sem Ti”, another heartbreakingly beautiful moment on the record, was composed by Miguel Gameiro who wrote a song a few years ago for Mariza’s new-born son. And the sensual “Alma” is a song where she had difficulties at first to understand the melody. The result is another sweet and melancholic little ditty, staying true to the fado tradition, but giving it this one little extra edge. The guitar-driven music on “Mundo” and Mariza‘s dramatic performance all add to a very special set of songs here.

Mariza also recorded a classic fado on her new album; “Maldicao”, written by Alfredo Marceneiro and Armando Vieira Pinto, had been recorded by one of the most, if not the most, important interpreters of this genre, the queen of fado, Amália Rodrigues. Mariza easily picks up on this one and she’s walking in Amália’s footsteps.

Mariza, vocals
José Manuel Neto, guitar
Pedro Jóia, acoustic guitar
Charlie Mendes, acoustic bass guitar
Alfonso Pérez, piano, keyboards
Israel Suárez “Piraña”, drums, percussion
Joel Pina, acoustic bass
Rui Veloso, piano
Javier Limón, flamenco guitar
Carlos Leitão, viola

Produced by Javier Limón


Mariza Nunes
in full Mariza Nunes (born Dec. 16, 1973, Mozambique) Mozambique-born Portuguese singer, who popularized fado, a traditional Portuguese musical genre that combines a narrative vocal style with acoustic guitar accompaniment, to a global audience. Portuguese President, Jorge Sampaio, the honours of Commander of the Order of Prince Henry the Navigator.

Mariza and her family moved to Lisbon when she was age 3. There her parents ran a restaurant located in the neighbourhood where fado was said to have been born. Mariza began singing along with fado performers at the family restaurant before she learned how to read. When she was 15, her adolescent interest in more “modern” music genres led her to explore rock, blues, jazz, and bossa nova, but by adulthood Mariza had returned to her first love. She was discovered by musician and producer Jorge Fernando, who heard her sing one evening and persuaded her to record an entire album. She appeared on Portuguese television as part of a special program in honour of legendary fadista Amália Rodrigues, who died in 1999. Mariza’s performance drew praise, and in 2000 she was presented with the Voice of Fado award by Central FM (the national radio station of Portugal). Later the popular Portuguese television program Hermansic asked her to perform for pop star Sting in order to introduce him to fado music.

Mariza’s debut album, Fado em mim, was released in Portugal in 2001 and garnered widespread critical acclaim when it was released internationally the following year. In early 2003 Mariza received the BBC’s Radio 3 World Music Award for best European act. She released her second album, Fado curvo, that year, and she toured extensively to support it. Her third album, Transparente (2005), angered some purists by breaking with the traditional fado sound and including sweeping orchestral string arrangements and up-tempo, Django Reinhardt-inspired guitar accompaniment.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO