To listen to audio on Rock Paper Scissors you'll need to Get the Flash Player

Sample Track 1:
"Tiche" from Rogamar (Sony/BMG)
Sample Track 2:
"Rogamar " from Rogamar (Sony/BMG)
Buy Recording:
Rogamar (Sony/BMG)
Layer 2
Feature

Click Here to go back.
The Oakland Tribune, Feature >>

- By Jim Harrington

THE CAPE VERDEAN musical genre known as morna can be likened to many styles. Including Brazilian modinha and Portuguese fade but its closest cousin may well be the blues.

Morna is a mournful-yet- hopeful genre, usually sung in Cape Verdean Creole, and its best-known voice belongs to Cesaria Evora.

The 65-year-old folk singer will share the music ofher native Cape Verde with local fans during two Bay Area performances this weekend. She is set to appear Saturday at the Nob HIU Masonic Center, as part of SFJAZZ's Spring Season, and Sunday at the Mountain Winery In Saratoga.

During a recent interview, with Evora's assistant, Julieta Maia Lopes, interpreting, the vocalist spoke of her most recent CD, 2006's "Rogamar." For starters, she explained why she chose the title, which can be loosely translated as "pray to the sea."

"The sea is very important to the life of each Cape Verdean," Evora said from a tour stop in Portugal. "In each record, I always have a song about the sea. We cannot live without the sea."

Ironically, it was the sea that might have kept Evora from acWeving International renown much earlier in her career.

The Republic of Cape Verde consists of a small cluster of islands off the western coast of Africa. For generations, many local musicians entertained fellow Cape Verdeans and the occasional batch of tourists, but otherwise operated in Isolation from the rest ofthe world.

, Evora was a niember of that ch4> tor tnijiciit ofihq- paro^.

The vocalist — known as the original "Barefoot Diva" for her penchant for taking the stage without shoes — began jjerforming when she was a teenager. She decided to get serious about singing after receiving sound advice from her heartthrob at the time.

"I started when I was 16 years old with a group of young people who were plajfing guitais. I came to them and I started to sing," she said. "One of them, who was my boyfriend, said, "Sing harder, because you have a nice voice." I went on singing and I never stopped."

WeU, that's not exactly accurate. She quickly rose to stardom In her native land in the late '60s, then announced midway through the next decade that she was giving up the stage. The early retirement was partly due to Uie fact that Evora — although still quite popular ln Cape Verde — couldn't translate fame into fortune while operating solely as a local attraction.

She remained silent for 10 years. Then, in 1985, she decided to give the music business another try and left Cape Verde to record ln Europe. The initial breakthrough came In 1988 when Evora traveled to Paris

Please see JAZZ, I il f . I! c Pieview25 and taped "La Diva Aux Pieds Nus" (The Barefoot Diva"), which achieved worldwide critical acclaim.

The vocalist followed with 1992's "Miss Pedumado," which garnered a Grammy nomination and pushed Evora to international stardom. Suddenly she was a hot commodity on the world-music stage and boasted fans such as David Byme, Bonnie Raltt and Ed Bradley.

Most prominently. Madonna

became enamored of the Cape Verdean folk star. In fact, Evora was set to sing at Madonna's birthday party at Gianni Versace's oceanfront estate in Miami in 1997. The murder of the fashion mogul that same year, however, put an end to the party planning. Madonna also asked Evora to perform at her wedding in 2000, but plans eventu^y feU through.

It remains a mutual-admlra.tion society between the Barefoot Dlvaand"the Material Girl.' t' I '^'vfes a fan of Madonna when I was not known, in Cape Verde," Evora said. "I like to see Madonna onstage, you know?"

These days, Evora is more populcir than ever. Her concerts draw capacity crowds and she continues to win critical acclaim for her CDs. She sounds happy — even speaking from the background, with Lopes translating her words on the phone — and that's also how she looks on the cover of "Rogamar." Indeed, the absolute joy she radiates on the album-cover shot doesn't cany a hint of the mournful side of her signature morna music.

"My musicians have all these stories and I am always laughing when I am with them. That's why they took this picture and put It in this album," Evora explained. "On the other side, (Cape Verdeans) are joyful people — we are not sad people as other people say. No. We are people from a poor land, but we are joyful."
 06/08/07
Click Here to go back.