Cry, My Guitar

In stock
SKU
GSP1010CD
Maker/Manufacturer/Artist
RABELLO, RAPHAEL
Special Price $12.98 Regular Price $14.98
Available

[CD]

[recorded September/1994]

One of Acoustic Guitar Magazine's "Essential Acoustic Albums" from their 20th Anniversary Issue

also available for downloads and streaming at: https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/raphaelrabello - or your favorite site

“Raphael Rabello was simply one of the greatest guitarists who has ever lived. His level of insight into the potential of the instrument was matched only by the great Paco de Lucia. He was ‘The’ Brazilian guitarist of our time, in my opinion. His death at such a young age is an incredible loss, not only for what he already did, but for what he could have done.” - Pat Metheny

“Raphael is Brazil’s finest guitarist." - Antonio Carlos Jobim

“The best guitarist I’ve heard in years. He has overcome the technical limitations of the instrument, and his music comes unhindered from his soul, straight to the hearts of we who admire him.” - Paco de Lucia

"Recorded shortly before the guitarist's untimely death in 1995. 'Cry, My Guitar' is an album of Brazilian guitar that transcends typical interpretations of the genre." - Acoustic Guitar Magazine, 20th Anniversary Issue

"This is the missing CD among Raphael Rabello's scarce discography. It's like a dream come true to see this CD accomplished - one of the best solo guitar albums I have listened to. Congratulations to Dean Kamei for giving such an important contribution to the Brazilian guitar." - Paulo Bellinati

"...a wildly-gifted guitarist who died before a wave of international recognition could unify his talents with an audience outside the cognoscenti of musicians who knew all too well that his presence was phenomenal... On this most poignant of recordings, it was to be Rabello's last, one can feel the old world blend seamlessly with the new. his style embraced flamenco and jazz with the incredible counterpoint of the myriad of Brazilian dance forms. Flamboyant is one way to describe his playing, yet it is wholly sensitive and there are no loose, throw-away ideas in what he does. This is one of those recordings strewn with gems, all of them precious. Quite simply 'Cry, My Guitar' is Brazilian guitar music at its most exciting. The intimate nature of the recordings belies the exuberance of Rabello's mastery. GSP can be rest assured that their burgeoning catalogue of Brazilian music and artists is second to none and is doing wonders for the appreciation for some of the best guitar music on the planet." - Tim Panting, Classical Guitar Magazine

"Raphael Rabello's posthumous release of 13 solo finger-styled guitar pieces is nothing short of astonishing. Complex syncopated rhythms, intricate counterpoints, and cascading arpeggiated runs grace each wonderfully crafted composition. The mastery with which this late Brazilian guitarist commanded his instrument is unparalleled. However, throughout the recording the guitarist never loses focus on the inherent melody and beauty of each piece. Rabello plays much more from his heart rather than simply relying on the dexterity of his fingers. Nowhere is this better heard than on the title piece, "Cry My Guitar," which is a poignant tribute to his hero and close friend, Baden Powell. Throughout his career, Rabello considered himself a nationalist, and was quite contempt with mastering the music of his native heritage. However, with his integration of diverse musical pallets, the artist molded and redefined the parameters of Brazilian music, rather than merely reflecting the rich musical legacy of his peers and predecessors. Throughout the album one hears how effortlessly the guitarist blends Flamenco, Classical, Jazz, and Brazilian styles into his musical vision to create something truly unique and at the same time true to his heritage. Rabello plays each note with such urgency and passion that one can only imagine the contributions he could have made if he had lived. However, this recording will clearly help solidify this extraordinary musician's legacy. Raphael Rabello was not just a guitarist of his own generation, but one whose echoes will be heard for many generations to come." - James Scott, Minor 7th Webzine < p>"One of the truly great, and equally tragic personalities of the guitar world, both embodied in the life and work of Raphael Rabello, this final recording is a great gift to the world. A true master and innovator of the 7-string guitar...this is a documentation of a life, although in conflict, that soared to musical heights that few could ever attain. Raphael's playing comprises fire, passion, pathos and sadness, giving the title "Cry, My Guitar," an appropriateness for this final work." - John Martin, Guitart Magazine

"Brazilian guitarist Raphael Rabello transcended every expectation about how he "should" sound, given widespread preconceptions about his heritage and his instrument. By the time he died at age 33 in 1995, Rabello had made several groundbreaking ecordings, including Dois Irmaos, an influential duo album with clarinetist Paulo Moura. 'Cry, My Guitar' was recorded in 1994, and its release more than a decade later unearths a lost treasure. Rabello composed only five of the CD's 13 tracks, but his signature voice - precise and confident chops augmented by flamenco rasgueados and jazz harmonies - is apparent in such familiar Brazilian fare as Baden Powell's "Sentimentos, se Voce Pergunta: Nunca Vai Saber" and Garoto's "Lamentos do Morro." Of Rabello's originals, "Sete Cordas" is representative of his virtuosity and sense of form, with clever melodic lines weaving through beautiful chords. 'Cry, My Guitar' should be mandatory listening not only for fans of nylon-string guitar and classical music, but also for anyone who appreciates brilliant instrumental soloists on any instrument, in any genre." - Teja Gerken, Acoustic Guitar Magazine

THE LINER NOTES

This CD contains the last solo recordings of an extraordinary musical artist who died just as he was poised to reach an international audience. Guitarist and composer Raphael Rabello revived and extended violão Brasileiro—the Brazilian guitar style that encompasses the classical guitar tradition, Brazilian popular, and Brazilian folk music. Rio’s Jornal do Brasil called him “the reinventor of Brazilian guitar…responsible for a new surge of energy such as that injected by Baden Powell during the bossa nova era.”

Rabello’s influence on the Brazilian guitar tradition compares to that of Paco de Lucia on flamenco. Both are superb technicians with a visceral approach to the instrument that can leave listeners breathless. And they each changed the course of their respective styles by synthesizing international elements with the traditional. Not surprisingly, Paco and Raphael admired each other greatly, collaborated on one of Raphael’s recordings (Todos os Tons, BMG 10105, 1992), and had planned a CD of duets. Rabello’s career also resembles that of Brazilian guitarist and composer Garoto (Annibal Augusto Sardinha). Garoto, a stunning virtuoso, was one of the architects of bossa nova, and he too died prematurely as he was about to enter the international spotlight.

Raphael Rabello was born in 1962 in Petropolis, the old Imperial capitol in the mountains above Rio de Janeiro. His was a family of professional musicians going back three generations. Raphael’s professional debut was with Os Carioquinhas in the 1970s. This group became popular during a national revival of choro—a traditional popular music from Rio de Janeiro that may sound to Americans like a mixture of ragtime and New Orleans jazz. (Choro was dear to composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, who was himself a fine choro guitarist. For Villa-Lobos choro was a musical touchstone. He used the style as the basis for many of his compositions.)

In his teens Raphael studied with Dino Meira (Jaime Tomás Florence), who once taught Baden Powell. The youth made his first television appearance at age 13 at the behest of Hermínio Bello de Carvalho, who later produced two LPs with him. At this stage in his career he was called Raphael Sete Cordas (“Seven-String Raphael”) because of his mastery of the seven-stringed guitar that is central to choro. Raphael’s tune Sete Cordas (written in collaboration with Paulo Cesar Pinheiro) comes from this period when he was considered Brazil’s leading choro guitarist. Ironically, this piece—heard on this CD—was his last solo recording.

But Raphael was not merely a choro specialist. Indeed his first LP (Raphael Sete Cordas, Fontana/Polygram 6488-174, 1982) included music by Jobim, Agustin Barrios, and Garoto. And although he never abandoned choro, he quickly moved to modernize his guitaristic approach to “MPB” (“Brazilian Popular Music”)—music closely linked to samba. Another of his most important influences was composer Radamés Gnattali, who tutored him informally and had him study harmony. The result was a modern harmonic approach to guitar arrangement that included an unusually rich array of tone colors and techniques. Raphael’s solos and accompaniments were fresh and innovative—chock full of unexpected turns, subtle nuances, and always fire. Later, impressed with the power of modern flamenco, Raphael incorporated into Brazilian music that seemingly incompatible style and made it work splendidly. (His explosive arrangement of Jobim’s Girl from Ipanema on Todos os Tons is a good early example.)

Asked to define himself musically, Rabello said: “I follow the wave of Villa-Lobos and Radamés Gnattali—I am a nationalist.” But as anyone familiar with Brazilian music knows, that definition covers a lot of ground. Rabello’s eclecticism is apparent in the profile of his recording and performance career. He concertized with renowned classical guitarist Turibio Santos and pianist Artur Moreira Lima. Other collaborators included samba queen Elizeth Cardoso, Brazil’s leading saxophonist Paulo Moura, and the popular crooner Ney Matogrosso—not to mention Gnattali, Jobim, Dino Sete Cordas, and Paco de Lucia. Just before Raphael died in 1995 he was preparing to launch an international career. The producer of New York’s leading guitar series was trying to contact him for a concert at the time of his death. This recording leaves no doubt in my mind that his name would have sooner or later become a household word among those who love the guitar. In the words of Turibio Santos, Raphael Rabello was “an anthology of Brazilian popular music, one of those musicians who comes along once in a hundred years.”

Most of the music heard on this CD is drawn from the choro tradition. The five Rabello originals, (one in collaboration with Toquinho), comprise an important contribution to the genre in themselves and demonstrate Rabello’s absolute mastery of it. The recording includes older works by Pixinguinha, and by João dos Santos—a guitarist/composer active in the 1930s and ’40s. A more modern approach is heard in the pieces by Garoto and Laurindo Almeida. Canhoto da Paraíba (Francisco Soares de Araujo, b. 1928) is from Recife in northeastern Brazil, but is well-known in Rio. Baden Powell, probably Brazil’s best-known guitarist internationally, is renowned for his sambas and bossa novas. However, as his piece on this CD attests, he is equally at home with choro. Passaredo is an MPB song by Francis Hime made popular in 1976, sung by the inimitable Chico Buarque, who wrote the lyrics.

In Latin America especially it is foolish to pick one guitarist, no matter how good he is, and call him the best. Still, I doubt there was any musician who, on hearing Raphael, was not amazed.

Brian Hodel

produced by Dean Kamei
recorded by John Strother
assisted by Rose Landauer at Penguin Recording - Eagle Rock, CA
mixed by Dean Kamei at GSP - San Francisco, CA
digital master by GSP
graphics by GSP/dk
photos by Wilton Montenegro

Raphael thanks Hélio and Paula Faraco, Mãe Cleusa do Gantois, Guilherme Vergueiro

The producer thanks John Strother, Rose Landauer, Luciana Rabello, Paulo Bellinati, and Raphael

Raphael was one of the finest guitarists I have ever heard. His talent was enormous and I am highly honored yet deeply saddened to have produced his final solo recording. The memory of Raphael’s untimely passing has been a somber reality for me while working on this album, and though my only disappointment is that he is not here to share in it’s completion, his ‘larger than life’ presence and spirit have been influential throughout the entire post-production process.

Raphael’s original title for this CD was "Back To Life," as he felt a ‘new beginning’ for himself here in California after briefly moving from Rio de Janeiro to San Diego. Although "Back To Life" would be appropriate in some ways, I’ve decided to use "Cry, My Guitar," the title which Raphael inexplicably used for the Baden Powell piece on this album—I have since learned that "Cry, My Guitar" is not the correct title of this piece. However, I do sense Raphael’s approval as I recall him repeatedly going over some of the nuances of Baden’s guitar style in preparation for the recording of this piece. We spoke at length of our mutual respect and admiration for this great musician and close friend of Raphael’s—one of his most idolized heroes. The influence is obvious in Raphael’s own unique style. It was indeed difficult to choose between the two session takes of “Cry, My Guitar” (Sentimentos, se Voce Pergunta: Nunca Vai Saber)—both unique, each equally inspired.

We recorded everything in two afternoons in September of 1994. At Raphael’s request, we recorded with the specially installed internal microphones in his guitar. "Sete Cordas" is included despite the noticeably different audio quality from the rest of the album. It was fortunately preserved on tape while Raphael warmed-up before the first session, at a distance and off-center from a pair of microphones which happened to be on at the time. It is a hauntingly beautiful interpretation and a fitting mood to close this album—sadly, Raphael’s last.

Dean Kamei

also available for downloads and streaming at: https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/raphaelrabello - or your favorite site

More Information
Track 1 Ainda me Recordo (Pixinguinha)
Track 2 Tua Imagem (Canhoto da Paraiba)
Track 3 Sentimentos... (B. Powell)
Track 4 Meu Avo (R. Rabello)
Track 5 Pedra do Leme (R. Rabello & Toquinho)
Track 6 Malandro Descendo o Morro (J. dos Santos)
Track 7 Camara (R. Rabello)
Track 8 Choro Para Olga (L. Almeida)
Track 9 Com Mais de Mil (Canhoto da Paraiba)
Track 10 Moleque do Gantois (R. Rabello)
Track 11 Passaredo (F. Hime)
Track 12 Lamentos do Morro (Garoto)
Track 13 Sete Cordas (R. Rabello & P.C. Pinheiro)
Featured Product No
Maker/Manufacturer/Artist RABELLO, RAPHAEL
Availability Available
Description

THE LINER NOTES

This CD contains the last solo recordings of an extraordinary musical artist who died just as he was poised to reach an international audience. Guitarist and composer Raphael Rabello revived and extended violão Brasileiro—the Brazilian guitar style that encompasses the classical guitar tradition, Brazilian popular, and Brazilian folk music. Rio’s Jornal do Brasil called him “the reinventor of Brazilian guitar…responsible for a new surge of energy such as that injected by Baden Powell during the bossa nova era.”

Rabello’s influence on the Brazilian guitar tradition compares to that of Paco de Lucia on flamenco. Both are superb technicians with a visceral approach to the instrument that can leave listeners breathless. And they each changed the course of their respective styles by synthesizing international elements with the traditional. Not surprisingly, Paco and Raphael admired each other greatly, collaborated on one of Raphael’s recordings (Todos os Tons, BMG 10105, 1992), and had planned a CD of duets. Rabello’s career also resembles that of Brazilian guitarist and composer Garoto (Annibal Augusto Sardinha). Garoto, a stunning virtuoso, was one of the architects of bossa nova, and he too died prematurely as he was about to enter the international spotlight.

Raphael Rabello was born in 1962 in Petropolis, the old Imperial capitol in the mountains above Rio de Janeiro. His was a family of professional musicians going back three generations. Raphael’s professional debut was with Os Carioquinhas in the 1970s. This group became popular during a national revival of choro—a traditional popular music from Rio de Janeiro that may sound to Americans like a mixture of ragtime and New Orleans jazz. (Choro was dear to composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, who was himself a fine choro guitarist. For Villa-Lobos choro was a musical touchstone. He used the style as the basis for many of his compositions.)

In his teens Raphael studied with Dino Meira (Jaime Tomás Florence), who once taught Baden Powell. The youth made his first television appearance at age 13 at the behest of Hermínio Bello de Carvalho, who later produced two LPs with him. At this stage in his career he was called Raphael Sete Cordas (“Seven-String Raphael”) because of his mastery of the seven-stringed guitar that is central to choro. Raphael’s tune Sete Cordas (written in collaboration with Paulo Cesar Pinheiro) comes from this period when he was considered Brazil’s leading choro guitarist. Ironically, this piece—heard on this CD—was his last solo recording.

But Raphael was not merely a choro specialist. Indeed his first LP (Raphael Sete Cordas, Fontana/Polygram 6488-174, 1982) included music by Jobim, Agustin Barrios, and Garoto. And although he never abandoned choro, he quickly moved to modernize his guitaristic approach to “MPB” (“Brazilian Popular Music”)—music closely linked to samba. Another of his most important influences was composer Radamés Gnattali, who tutored him informally and had him study harmony. The result was a modern harmonic approach to guitar arrangement that included an unusually rich array of tone colors and techniques. Raphael’s solos and accompaniments were fresh and innovative—chock full of unexpected turns, subtle nuances, and always fire. Later, impressed with the power of modern flamenco, Raphael incorporated into Brazilian music that seemingly incompatible style and made it work splendidly. (His explosive arrangement of Jobim’s Girl from Ipanema on Todos os Tons is a good early example.)

Asked to define himself musically, Rabello said: “I follow the wave of Villa-Lobos and Radamés Gnattali—I am a nationalist.” But as anyone familiar with Brazilian music knows, that definition covers a lot of ground. Rabello’s eclecticism is apparent in the profile of his recording and performance career. He concertized with renowned classical guitarist Turibio Santos and pianist Artur Moreira Lima. Other collaborators included samba queen Elizeth Cardoso, Brazil’s leading saxophonist Paulo Moura, and the popular crooner Ney Matogrosso—not to mention Gnattali, Jobim, Dino Sete Cordas, and Paco de Lucia. Just before Raphael died in 1995 he was preparing to launch an international career. The producer of New York’s leading guitar series was trying to contact him for a concert at the time of his death. This recording leaves no doubt in my mind that his name would have sooner or later become a household word among those who love the guitar. In the words of Turibio Santos, Raphael Rabello was “an anthology of Brazilian popular music, one of those musicians who comes along once in a hundred years.”

Most of the music heard on this CD is drawn from the choro tradition. The five Rabello originals, (one in collaboration with Toquinho), comprise an important contribution to the genre in themselves and demonstrate Rabello’s absolute mastery of it. The recording includes older works by Pixinguinha, and by João dos Santos—a guitarist/composer active in the 1930s and ’40s. A more modern approach is heard in the pieces by Garoto and Laurindo Almeida. Canhoto da Paraíba (Francisco Soares de Araujo, b. 1928) is from Recife in northeastern Brazil, but is well-known in Rio. Baden Powell, probably Brazil’s best-known guitarist internationally, is renowned for his sambas and bossa novas. However, as his piece on this CD attests, he is equally at home with choro. Passaredo is an MPB song by Francis Hime made popular in 1976, sung by the inimitable Chico Buarque, who wrote the lyrics.

In Latin America especially it is foolish to pick one guitarist, no matter how good he is, and call him the best. Still, I doubt there was any musician who, on hearing Raphael, was not amazed.

Brian Hodel

produced by Dean Kamei
recorded by John Strother
assisted by Rose Landauer at Penguin Recording - Eagle Rock, CA
mixed by Dean Kamei at GSP - San Francisco, CA
digital master by GSP
graphics by GSP/dk
photos by Wilton Montenegro

Raphael thanks Hélio and Paula Faraco, Mãe Cleusa do Gantois, Guilherme Vergueiro

The producer thanks John Strother, Rose Landauer, Luciana Rabello, Paulo Bellinati, and Raphael

Raphael was one of the finest guitarists I have ever heard. His talent was enormous and I am highly honored yet deeply saddened to have produced his final solo recording. The memory of Raphael’s untimely passing has been a somber reality for me while working on this album, and though my only disappointment is that he is not here to share in it’s completion, his ‘larger than life’ presence and spirit have been influential throughout the entire post-production process.

Raphael’s original title for this CD was "Back To Life," as he felt a ‘new beginning’ for himself here in California after briefly moving from Rio de Janeiro to San Diego. Although "Back To Life" would be appropriate in some ways, I’ve decided to use "Cry, My Guitar," the title which Raphael inexplicably used for the Baden Powell piece on this album—I have since learned that "Cry, My Guitar" is not the correct title of this piece. However, I do sense Raphael’s approval as I recall him repeatedly going over some of the nuances of Baden’s guitar style in preparation for the recording of this piece. We spoke at length of our mutual respect and admiration for this great musician and close friend of Raphael’s—one of his most idolized heroes. The influence is obvious in Raphael’s own unique style. It was indeed difficult to choose between the two session takes of “Cry, My Guitar” (Sentimentos, se Voce Pergunta: Nunca Vai Saber)—both unique, each equally inspired.

We recorded everything in two afternoons in September of 1994. At Raphael’s request, we recorded with the specially installed internal microphones in his guitar. "Sete Cordas" is included despite the noticeably different audio quality from the rest of the album. It was fortunately preserved on tape while Raphael warmed-up before the first session, at a distance and off-center from a pair of microphones which happened to be on at the time. It is a hauntingly beautiful interpretation and a fitting mood to close this album—sadly, Raphael’s last.

Dean Kamei

also available for downloads and streaming at: https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/raphaelrabello - or your favorite site

Copyright © 2021 Guitar Solo Publications. All rights reserved.