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Adriana Calcanhotto | |
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Calcanhotto in 2015 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Adriana da Cunha Calcanhotto |
Born | (1965-10-03) 3 October 1965 (age 59) Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil |
Genres | MPB |
Occupation(s) | Singer, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1984–present |
Website | adrianacalcanhotto |
Adriana da Cunha Calcanhotto (born 3 October 1965) is a Brazilian singer-songwriter. Her melancholic songs are often categorized in the MPB genre. She began her professional career in 1984 and released her first studio album in 1990.
Career
Born from musician Carlos Calcanhotto (originally Calcagnotto) of Italian origin from Volpago del Montello, Veneto, and from a Brazilian dancer. Adriana's first album, called Enguiço, was released in 1990 and consisted mostly of covers of well known MPB (Brazilian pop) songs, part of the repertoire she used to perform as a singer in restaurants and bars in Porto Alegre. It included only one original composition, the title track. It spawned her first hit, a cover of Caetano Veloso's Naquela Estação, which became successful thanks to it being included in the soundtrack of the successful 1990 telenovela Rainha da Sucata.
1992 saw the release of Senhas, which included the hits "Mentiras" and "Esquadros" and was followed by a successful national tour. In 1994, Adriana, sporting a new look (short black hair as opposed to the slightly longer bright blond haircut she'd had since the beginning of her career) released A Fábrica do Poema, considered by many to be her most poetic album. She collaborated with lyricists like Waly Salomão and António Cícero (brother and constant musical partner of fellow singer Marina Lima) and included the hits "Metade" and "Inverno". This was followed by Maritmo (a combination of the words marítimo (maritime) and ritmo (rhythm)), a concept album intended as the first part of a trilogy having water as a main theme.
At the turn of the millennium, Adriana experienced the peak of her career with the release of the album Público in 2000. Her first live album/DVD, Público was recorded in a voz-e-violão (voice and guitar) style, meaning there was no band, only the singer playing her acoustic guitar, an instrument which has followed her through her entire career. The album included a cover of the staple torch song Devolva-me, made famous by the duo Leno & Lilian back in the 1960s. This album was followed by her first greatest hits compilation, Perfil (the success of this album prompted her record company to make it a series, releasing compilations of the same title by such artists as Cássia Eller, Zélia Duncan and Djavan). Another album of new material wouldn't be released until 2002, when the singer released "Cantada". In the meantime, Adriana toured Europe and Japan (as she has done many times since).
After the release of that album, Adriana took on the persona of Adriana Partimpim, an alias the singer claims to have used as a child. Adriana Partimpim released her self-titled "debut" in 2004, an album of covers featuring essentially traditional children's songs, but which also included familiar pop songs made to resemble children's songs. Examples of such songs are the covers of Paula Toller's Oito Anos (a song Toller wrote for her own son, Gabriel) and Claudinho & Buchecha's Fico Assim Sem Você, which became a hit on adult radios. A live CD/DVD combo of the show was also released the following year.
Her most recent album, Maré, was released in early 2008 and features a guest appearance by the singer's personal friend, Marisa Monte as well as a cover of Marina Lima's song Três. She toured Brazil to promote the record, as well as once again touring Europe, Japan and the United States. Adriana has chronicled her adventures on tour in the book Saga Lusa (Portuguese Saga), in which she shares her memoirs of the Portuguese leg of her most recent tour. The book was released on October 28 in Rio de Janeiro.
On October 23, 2009, Adriana performed in front of an adoring crowd at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Gatineau, Quebec, Canada in a free performance presented by the Embassy of Brazil.
Since 2015, Calcanhotto had joined Universidade de Coimbra as a university ambassador, acting as visiting lecturer on song composition courses and as an artist-in-residence.
Her album Errante was chosen by the Associação Paulista de Críticos de Arte as one of the 50 best Brazilian albums of 2023.
Personal life
From 2021 to 2022, she dated actress Maitê Proença.
Discography
Albums
Title | Details | Sales | Certification |
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Enguiço |
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Senhas |
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A Fábrica do Poema |
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Maritmo |
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Público |
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Perfil – Adriana Calcanhotto |
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Cantada |
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Adriana Partimpim |
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Adriana Partimpim – O Show |
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Maré |
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Partimpim Dois |
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Seleção Essencial |
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O Micróbio do Samba |
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Multishow ao Vivo: Micróbio Vivo |
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Partimpim Tlês |
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Olhos de Onda |
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Loucura |
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References
- UOL. "Biografia de Adriana Calcanhotto – Pega Cifras". Archived from the original on August 5, 2012. Retrieved November 30, 2012.
- Barros, Adriana de (19 January 2024). "APCA divulga os 50 melhores álbuns nacionais de 2023". TV Cultura (in Portuguese). São Paulo: Fundação Padre Anchieta. Retrieved 15 December 2024.
- "Maitê Proença e Adriana Calcanhotto terminaram após declaração polêmica e exposição demais". Extra Online (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2022-08-09. Retrieved 2023-12-25.
- Famosos', 'Observatório dos (2023-08-16). "Maitê Proença fala sobre sexo após fim do namoro com Adriana Calcanhotto". Diversão e Arte (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-12-25.
External links
- Adriana Calcanhotto's official website (in Portuguese)
- "Musica Popular Brasileira e mais"
- Something Has Changed In Brazil: An Interview with Adriana Calcanhotto Archived 2014-03-31 at the Wayback Machine
- 1965 births
- Living people
- Brazilian women composers
- 21st-century Brazilian women singers
- 21st-century Brazilian singers
- 20th-century Brazilian women singers
- 20th-century Brazilian singers
- Brazilian people of Italian descent
- Música Popular Brasileira singers
- Latin Grammy Award winners
- Musicians from Porto Alegre
- Brazilian LGBTQ singers
- Latin music composers
- Latin music songwriters
- 21st-century Brazilian LGBTQ people
- Women in Latin music
- LGBTQ people in Latin music
- Brazilian LGBTQ women
- LGBTQ women musicians
- LGBTQ women singers