1. Home
  2. »
  3. Genres
  4. »
  5. World/Reggae
  6. »
  7. Brazilian
  8. »
  9. Bossa Nova

Bossa Nova

Share
  • Overview
  • Key Artists
  • Top Artists
  • Top Albums
  • Top Tracks
  • Radio
  • New
  • People
1663727_356x237
781456_356x237
507085_356x237
732320_356x237

Top Tracks

More tracks
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    2:25
    Jazz 'N' Samba (So Danco Samba)
    Charlie Byrd
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    2:54
    The Girl From Ipanema
    Stan Getz
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    2:44
    Mas Que Nada featuring Gracinha Leporace (2011 Rio Version)
    Sergio Mendes

Top Listeners

More Top Listeners
Jayme da Silva
sk86
Alan Rotenberg
Member vljd
Member g6jc
Member zie1

Description

In the late 1950s and early '60s, songwriters like the classically-trained Antonio Carlos "Tom" Jobim and the soft-voiced guitarist Joao Gilberto created a smoother, jazz-influenced version of the Samba -- which itself was a product of the nation's poorer classes. Middle-class Brazilians preferred the newer sound, which was dubbed Bossa Nova, or "The New Way." Bossa Nova is velvet sophistication atop a feathery five-against-four rhythm, and is most famously epitomized by Gilberto's "Girl from Ipanema." American jazzmen like Stan Getz -- who went on to collaborate frequently with Gilberto -- and Herbie Mann visited Brazil and brought the Bossa Nova to international attention. Some commercial distortion followed, but Bossa Nova continues to influence modern Brazilian pop and other regional styles today.