Daniela Mercury - Sou de Qualquer Lugar (2001)

  • 10 Jan, 19:30
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Artist:
Title: Sou de Qualquer Lugar
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: BMG Brasil
Genre: Pop, MPB, Latin
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 54:27
Total Size: 411 / 138 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. De Qualquer Lugar (4:35)
02. Baiana Havaneira (3:25)
03. A Praieira (3:43)
04. Beat Lamento (3:38)
05. Aeromoça (3:40)
06. Estrelas (3:44)
07. Ata-me (3:18)
08. Mutante (4:24)
09. Um Tempo de Paixão (3:49)
10. Bora Morar (4:21)
11. Quem Puder Ser Bom Que Seja (3:59)
12. Janela (3:49)
13. Nossa Música (3:53)
14. Nina (4:03)

Daniela Mercury obviously learned a lot from her last Emilio Estefan-produced album in that she moved from being a Brazilian star to the real international stage, injecting plenty of studio gloss into the album. Well, the gloss remains, thick and heavy, even if her trademark, percussive-heavy axé sound is far less in evidence on this disc. She lays her cards on the table from the outset, as "De Qualquer Lugar" brings in plenty of beats and programming, and more than a touch of electronica. This is a modern album, one aimed at a wide audience. Having been the Queen of Axé for so long, Mercury is straining for the big time. And on the basis of the slower "Estrellas," a duet with Toni Garrido, or her own composition "Ata-Me," she deserves wider recognition. But her material also comes from some of Brazil's top composers, people like Carlinhos Brown, Gilberto Gil, and Chico Science, making for a cross-section of MPB (Brazilian popular music) writers. Brown's work probably fits her best, with its naturally percussive feel -- she's a singer who seems to feel the rhythm more than most, and use it as a springboard to a higher energy level. While it's not her best album -- at times the gloss is laid on a little too thickly, obscuring the soul in Mercury's wonderful, pliable voice -- it still has its moments. And when she hits it right, there's no one in Brazil, or the Latin world, to beat her.