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Like
no one else we can think of, Cibelle makes use of a variety
of elements to create unique, imaginative and enchanting pieces
of music. Let's not mince our words : her second album is a
genuine masterpiece! It combines rootsy acoustic instrumentation
and electronic processing, noise guitars and childrens toys,
captivating textural soundscapes and pure melodies carried by
her unmistakable, moving voice.
Listening to each of the songs on The Shine of Dried
Electric Leaves is like hearing a story and exploring
a landscape full of surprises, all at once. Cibelle's lyrics
and musical ideas are directly derived from her emotional
life: she says she likes to use her life as a lab, and claims
to be the hamster and the scientist all at once...
Cibelle produced this album over a
period of 18 months, taking some of the tracks with her from
London (where she now resides) to São Paulo (her home town)
and back, gathering along the way contributions from various
coproducers and performers including Mike Lindsay (from UK
folktronica act Tunng), Apollo Nove (the innovative producer/artist
from São Paulo, who produced most of her debut album), Parisian
mixer Yann Arnaud (Air, Sebastien Schuller), and guests such
as Seu Jorge (of ‘City Of God’ and ‘The Life Aquatic’ fame),
Devendra Banhart, and CocoRosie collaborator Spleen.
While some of the album's ten original
compositions (written by Cibelle in partnership with her various
collaborators) and three covers are simple, limpid crystalline
gems (such as her Train Station, her renditions of Tom Waits'
Green Grass and of Jobim's Por toda minha vida to name but
a few), some others are genuine pop mini-symphonies bursting
with ideas, with musical and lyrical story lines which take
you from A to Z without ever looking back (Lembra, Flying
High, City People, Phoenix).
Also noteworthy are Mad Man Song,
in which all the sounds but one were created by Cibelle and
Spleen using only their voices, spoons, sugarcubes, cups and
coffee… and London, London (sung in duet with Devendra Banhart),
a song written by Brazilian hero/star Caetano Veloso while
he was living in forced exile in London during the early '70s,
which strangely echoes Cibelle's own (voluntary) move to the
UK some 30 years later. The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves
will be released in April 2006. Cibelle will be performing
all around Europe and North America throughout the rest of
the year, with her 4-piece band (Kristian Craig Robinson:
guitar, keyboards, live processing – Felipe Pagani: guitars
– Vladimiro Carboni: drums - Cibelle: vocals, percussion and
live processing).
Rewind: Cibelle's self-titled debut
album came out in 2003 and immediately established her as
one of the most imaginative and original young artists to
come out of Brazil. She had made her recording debut as the
main vocalist on the late Suba's cult São Paulo
Confessions album.
Photo Credit: Kevin Westenberg
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