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Sample Track 1:
"Tive Razao" from Cru
Sample Track 2:
"Mania Do Peitao" from Cru
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Cru
Layer 2
Biography

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American Way, Biography >>

Born into a poor community in Rio de Janeiro, albeit one not as poverty-stricken as the slums (known as favelas) portrayed in City of God, the 35-year-old Jorge has escaped the social exile imposed by upper-class Brazilians to become one himself. Self-taught guitarist and actor, Jorge shot to stardom in Brazil when his debut solo album, Samba Exporte Ft no (produced by fellow Brazilian and Beasite Boys producer Mario Caklato), became the country's album of the year in 1999. And then Jorge met Oscar-nominated director Fernando Meirelles.

Unlike most of the actors in the worldwide smash City of God, Jorge had performed in several plays when he was cast as Knockout Ned in the brutally violent, wide-eyed, very real depiction of life in one of Rio's largest favelas. That role led to a gig in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. In addition to acting in the film, Jorge recorded a handful of Portuguese versions of David Bowie classics for its soundtrack.

Jorge's lyrics, like those of his musical forefathers Milton Nascimento and Gilberto Gil, can run left of center into a political whirlwind colored by the sultry rhythms of samba-style pop, but they do so without campaign hyperbole; the music does most of the talking. Though Jorge sings mostly in Portuguese, Cru does include an Eng- lish cover of "Don't" (made famous by Elvis Presley),

Whether he's singing about his native country's socioeconomic injustices ("Eu Sou Favela") or the lighter subject of love ("Tive Razao"), Jorge makes music a stripped-down affair that transcends language, a raw journey (cru , in fact, means "raw" in Portuguese) into one of the sexiest cultures on the planet, even if the subject matter is anything but. "I call my music the favela blues, where I put together all the emotions of the blues with the reality of life inside a favela," says Jorge.

If the albums opening tropical twang courtesy of the ukulele-like Portuguese cavaquinho doesn't transport you south faster than you can down another caipi-rinha, something is terribly wrong.  06/01/06
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