Site icon

Goodbye Song

American musician Stan Getz once asked Brazilian conductor
Júlio Medaglia, "Why doesn’t Baden Powell move to Europe or
the United States, where he would become the world’s greatest
guitarist?" To what Medaglia answered, "Because, may be,
he’s already the world’s greatest guitarist."
By RODOLFO ESPINOZA

The sounds he extracted from his guitar were magic and unique. Bossa nova owes a
lot to him. His musical style at a time popular and erudite became a model for musicians
all around the world. Now, his guitar is silent and the composer is not writing anymore.
Baden Powell de Aquino died September 26 from pneumonia, in Rio, at age 63, after a stay
of more than a month at Clínica Sorocaba. He was diabetic and had kidney problems. Much
of his ailments originated in his youth when he started to drink heavily and smoke, two
addictions that followed him throughout life.

He presented his last show recently. It was on August 18 at Belo Horizonte’s (capital
of Minas Gerais’s state) Minas Tênis Clube. His two sons, Phillipe, 20, and Louis-Marcel
Baden Powell, 18, are both musicians. Marcel, according to some accounts, inherited the
father’s talent for the guitar. Phillipe plays the piano. Baden was married for 23 years
to Silvia, but he was living with Elizabeth do Carmo in the last three years. "Our
project is to continue what he taught us," said Marcel. "And what he taught us
was to like "Tico Tico no Fubá" as much as Bach."

Before the end of the year, recording label Trama will release the last work of the
guitarist in which he interprets compositions by Noel Rosa and Dorival Caymmi, among
others. Lembranças, produced by Fernando Faro was recorded in May and also
contains Baden’s compositions like "O Astronauta" with Vinicius de Moraes and
"Falei e Disse" with Paulo César Pinheiro.

Baden Powel was born on August 6, 1937, in Varre-Sai, a little town in the state of Rio
de Janeiro, 220 miles from Rio city, close to the border of Espírito Santo. His father,
Lino de Aquino, a shoemaker, boy scout leader and tuba player in his free time, named the
son after a man he admired: Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell (1857-1941), the
British soldier who in 1908 founded de Boy Scouts. The future guitarist was still a
three-month-old baby when he moved to Rio with his father, his mother Adelina and sister
Vera. He lived in poor neighborhoods like Vila Isabel and São Cristóvão, famous for
their talented musicians. Mr. Aquino used to receive at home legendary figures such as
Pixinguinha and Donga.

He was eight, when the father, arranged for Jaime Florence—a renowned composer and
guitarist—to teach Baden the guitar. The lessons went on for seven years, during
which time Baden mastered his instrument and learned to love and play classical pieces. He
would continue his studies later, studying harmony, composition and music theory at Rio’s
Escola Nacional de Música (National Music School). At 10 he got his first public
recognition when he won a guitar competition at Rio’s Rádio Nacional. He became a
professional at 14 with a special permit from the Juvenile Court and started to play in
ballrooms, nightclubs, radio and TV.

The guitarist was 18 when he started to play jazz in Rio’s nightclubs. He would soon
meet and become friends with such bossa nova icons as Tom Jobim and Vinicius de
Moraes. His first hit came in 1956 with "Samba Triste", a tune with lyrics by
Billy Blanco. He would compose another 500 tunes. With Vinicius as lyricist —he met
the poetinha (little poet) in 1962—Baden composed masterpieces like
"Deixa", "Samba em Prelúdio", "Consolação",
"Formosa", "Berimbau", and "Samba da Bênção".

Already the Greatest

He had other worthy partnerships. With Hermínio Bello de Carvalho, he created
"Samba da Partida" and with Paulo César de Carvalho, composed among other
songs, "Refém da Solidão". In 1963 he caused sensation at the Paris’s Olympia
Theater playing Ravel while the public was expecting Carnaval tunes.

In the early sixties, American musician Stan Getz once asked conductor Júlio Medaglia,
"Why doesn’t Baden Powell move to Europe or the United States, where he would become
the world’s greatest guitarist?" To what Medaglia answered, "Because, may be,
he’s already the world’s greatest guitarist." During the ’70s he ended up leaving
Brazil to live in France and Germany. He would only go back to Brazil in 1994 when he
released the CD Baden Powell de Rio a Paris.

Soon after coming from France in 1964, Baden Powell went to live for six months in
Salvador, Bahia. Interested in absorbing as much black popular culture as he could, the
composer became an assiduous frequenter of terreiros de candomblé (Afro-Brazilian
religion temples) and the sound of their instruments like tambours and berimbaus
would deeply influence his work. After 1997 when he became an evangelical he reneged some
of the tunes composed at this time.

French writer Dominique Dreyfus, who wrote Baden Powell’s biography, O Violão Vadio
de Baden Powell (Baden Powell’s Idle Guitar), describes the guitarist as temperamental
and timid, but also sensitive and compassionate. Modest, he never mentioned his
international success. He also talked to her about his drinking problem. He would
sometimes disappear for days, going from one bar to the other, until the family would call
the police and the radio stations to find him. His religious conversion also made him stop
drinking.

What they are saying:

Billy Blanco, partner in "Samba Triste":

"The MPB (Música Popular Brasileira—Brazilian Popular Music) lost its most
important and perfect guitarist. About other talents, we can say that Turíbio Santos, in
erudite music, and Sebastião Tapajós, a Baden disciple, have also reached perfection.
But Baden was absolute, he went well beyond the acquired technique with interminable hours
of study. Baden studied so much that I used to say he was addicted do the guitar. He would
wake up fingering the instrument. He wouldn’t take a break to give relief to his hand in a
warm water pot. They would become hardened. With Baden we cannot use that saying that no
one is irreplaceable."

Singer and composer Carlos Lyra:

"Baden was at Vinicius home when he presented "Samba em Prelúdio", a
tune he had just composed. Vinicius heard and liked it so much that he said that the
composition was from Chopin. Baden denied but Vinicius insisted. At the end, Vinicius
called one of his sisters who knew classical music very well, asked Baden to play and made
de questions: "Isn’t this Chopin?" She says no, Chopin had never written that
music. But Vinicius still unconvinced said, "Chopin didn’t make it because he forgot
it. This song belongs to him." I first met Baden in a bar, in 1955. In 1959, I
recorded my first LP and called him to play with me. We’ve never unglued from each other
since that time. Baden at that time made enough only to pay the rent, he made a living
playing here and there. But it was Vinicius who united us forever saying that Baden, Tom
Jobim and I formed the Holy Trinity. Baden who was Garoto’s heir leaves no heir."

Mário Telles, singer and composer:

"We lost a master. Baden was responsible for the creation of a style and this is
not for any soldier of fortune. It was he who placed African roots in bossa nova. I
hadn’t seen him for 20 years, but we were partners in drinking and making music. I would
say that familiarity with Baden was the reason I never attempted to learn the guitar.
Pelé’s friend cannot play soccer. Baden was the Pelé of the Brazilian guitar."

Júlio Medaglia, conductor and director at Teatro Municipal de São Paulo, who
was Baden’s producer during his Germany period, in the ’70s:

"In his generation, Baden was for sure the greatest guitarist in the world. His
big differential was his right hand agility, a quality that not even the best musicians
from the American jazz have. American jazz players are virtuosi but with the left hand
with which they juggle. Baden united both things. At the same time that he produced
perfect harmonies with the left, he had a vibrant right, full of rhythmic modulations that
made his guitar unique… Unfortunately, his drinking and his inconstancy harmed him a
lot professionally. American musicians are completely crazy but they get an astronomical
efficiency when it’s time to work. Baden conciliated both hands, but he couldn’t
conciliate talent and professionalism. His career could have been much bigger than it was.
Baden was a genius."

Music critic Tárik de Souza wrote:

"The acoustic guitar was for bossa nova what the electric guitar was for
rock. And the Jimi Hendrix of this revolution was called by the scout name of Baden Powell
de Aquino. He was a Garrincha [late famous soccer player] of the strings and with
disconcerting dribbles (and the same ethylic combustion) in genres and styles mesmerized
the world by the combination of technique, speed, dynamism, and emotional allure. Despite
having made a place for himself at bossa nova’s army, in partnership with poet
Vinicius de Moraes, Baden was never bossanovista… He became a star in the main
showrooms in Europe (mainly France and Germany), running in the opposite direction of his
colleagues in the movement (João Gilberto, Luís Bonfá, Sérgio Mendes, Oscar Castro
Neves, Eumir Deodato, Airto Moreira), who preferred the American market.

Discography:

Suíte Afro-consolação – 1998
Baden Powell à Paris – 1996
Live at Montreux Jazz Festival – 22 Juillet 1995/1996
Baden Powell & Filhos – 1995
De Rio à Paris – Décembre 94 – 1994
The Frankfurt Opera Concert – 1975/1992
Live in Switzerland – 1992
Afro-sambas – 1990
Live at the Rio Jazz Club – 1990
Violão em Seresta – 1989
Felicidade – 1983
De Baden para Vinicius – 1981
Nosso Baden – 1980
Maria D’Apparecida et Baden Powell – 1977
Baden Powell Canta Vinicius de Moraes e Paulo César Pinheiro – 1977
Mélancolie: Baden Powell et Cordes – 1976
Tristeza on Guitar – 1976
La Grande Réunion – Baden Powell e Stephane Grappelli – Vol. 2 – 1974
La Grande Réunion – Baden Powell e Stephane Grappelli – 1974
Apaixonado – 1973
Baden Powell Gravado ao Vivo em Paris – 1973
Face au Public: Olympia 1972 – 1972
Samba Triste – 1972
Grandezza on Guitar – 1972
É de Lei – 1972
Le Coeur de Baden Powell – 1971
Le Génie de Baden Powell – 1971
L’art de Baden Powell – 1971
L’âme de Baden Powell – 1971
Estudos – 1971
Solitude on Guitar – 1971
Baden Powell: Carinhoso – 1971
As músicas de Baden Powell e Paulo César Pinheiro – Os Cantores da Lapinha – 1970
Baden Powell Quartet – Vol. 3 – 1970
Baden Powell Quartet – Vol. 2 – 1970
Baden Powell Quartet – Vol. 1 – 1970
Lotus – 1970
Canto on Guitar – 1970
Le Monde Musical de Baden Powell – 1970
Le Monde Musical de Baden Powell – Vol. 2 – 1969
Aquarelles du Brésil – 1968
Baden Powell – Márcia – Os Originais – 1968
Poema on Guitar – 1968
Baden – 1966
Os Afro-sambas de Baden e Vinicius – 1966
Tempo Feliz – 1966
Ao Vivo no Teatro Santa Rosa – 1966
Billy Nencioli et Baden Powell – 1965
Le Monde Musical de Baden Powell – Vol. 1 – 1964
Baden Powell à Vontade – 1963
Baden Powell Swings with Jimmy Pratt – 1963
Um Violão na Madrugada – 1961
Apresentando Baden Powell e Seu Violão – 1959

Send
your
comments to
Brazzil

Next: Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies
Exit mobile version