On stage in front of an adoring audience
in São Paolo. Luiz Turiba, his press chief,
says: 'When Gil performs, he brings the
politics into the music.'
zen.' Gil admits that Hendrix turned him
round. Then, in 1971, he heard Bob Mar-
ley's records. 'I was living in Portobello
Road then,' he says, 'but I never met him.
Throughout the Seventies, while based
back in Brazil, Gil travelled the world, per
forming in Nigeria in the cause of black
unity, and visiting America. 'I saw one of
Marley's gigs in LA in 1978 and rushed
backstage but he'd gone. He came to
Brazil, but I missed him!' Why such an
impact? 'First, the peculiarity of that music:
the rhythm and the style were different
from anything before. And then, of course,
the subjects, religion and politics. And the
blackness which is part of the politics. But
basically, it is always the music that moves
me first, the sound.
Gil is going to be back on the boards with
his full band; in this new era, it is an excit-
ing event, because though Gil continues to
play regularly and tour the world, no one
can tell whether he will always have the time
to do so. His daughter Maria has joined us
in São Paolo and she is teased mercilessly
by the boisterous musicians for her Brasilia
ways. As she herds them from the hotel into
the bus, her sister Nara - one of Gil's
backing singers - hisses 'ministrinho'
(little minister) at her, and the others cheer
affectionately. Many of the group have
worked with Gil for years, and for them, the
new job is a disaster. 'We are really pleased
for him - but not for us,' says the youngest
arrival, exuberant 21-year-old singer Angela
Lopo.
Gil says he never really planned to be a
politician; in fact he has been one since the
beginning, a natural orator, an ambassador
through music. And he is happy with the
new life. "To reduce the music is OK,'he
says. “It's been 40 years, you know...I was
happy to change the routine.' He enjoys the
differences: Travelling as a politician is dif-
POLITICIANS
ferent: the ambience, the people the moti is dancing, a kind of samba-skanking, with
vation - everything. It's exciting. It's offices occasional swoops and bows brought in THOSE OTHER ROCKING
and palaces now instead of clubs and gym from candomble. He introduces his band
nasiums!
effusively and kisses Nara, calling her 'my
Doesn't he miss the buzz of being a poplittle black girl'. Maria, standing in the
star on stage? 'Yes,' he admits. He recently wings, dances non-stop and says she would
did play in Europe, but even then he had a love to be out there with them, but I'm too
governmental agenda as well. "For instance, shy.'
I had to fly to Portugal to meet the Presi-
dent.' Turiba adds: 'For Gil, the job doesn't
exclude music or performance. At every
opportunity there is music. His worlds are
interlinked. When he performs, he brings
the politics into the music.
Gil's performance fits Caetano Veloso's
description of his exuberant musicality,
perfect pitch, rhythm and fluency' offered
at their first meeting in 1963. Forty years
later, audiences around the world have
thrilled to the same ingredients. Now that
he is a Minister, that may change. On the
way to our rooms, I corner Gil for a final
chat, and ask how he sees himself in this
new role. It is midnight and we are leaving
the hotel for the airport at 3.30am, but he
rises instantly to the conversation, and
stands against the lift and talks. 'I don't
deal with hope, I deal with work. I con-
sider myself a sower of seeds. One of my
golden points is not to turn back to see
what is happening, to see what's happen-
ing with the seeds; let's keep going sow-
ing. It is a feeling I've been developing for
a long, long time. I have the feeling that I
came to sow things. You have to know what
you can do best.'
Three weeks later, Gil flew to Miami for
the Latin Grammy Awards, where he was
made Personality of the Year', and hon-
oured in a show involving some of Brazil's
best-known pop singers. Then he flew to
Santiago de Chile, to participate in the trib-
utes to the ultimate troubadour, Victor Jara,
who was tortured and killed by Pinochet's
government - a few years after Gil himself
had been in prison. Then he flew home to
Rio for a birthday party for Caetano Veloso,
and last month he played guitar to Kofi
Annan's bongos, at a concert in New York
to honour those killed and injured at the
UN base in Baghdad. "Life is good to me,'
he said, as I left him for the final time in the
airport lounge at some ungodly hour. He
was reading a small hardback book on eso-
teric pre-Christian religions.
OMM
Financially, it's not so straightforward.
Gil supports a company, Ge-Ge Produc
tions, two ex-wives and current wife Flora,
and six children (his eldest son was killed
in a car crash in 1990). When Lula asked
him to be Minister, he said he would have to
think whether he could afford it. But for
now, he is managing the demands, weath-
ering the criticism.
'Everyone wants Lula and Gil to perform
miracles straightaway because there are so
many problems in Brazil,' says Beth Lima,
a cultural correspondent for the leading
television station TV Globo. But it's impos-
sible to look at what they're doing yet; it's too
early. A year on, then we can talk about it.
But Gil's a man with a vision; he's an artist
and he's sensitive and intelligent. He knows
what the culture needs and he knows about
the problems of Brazil. It's a blessing to
have him in this role. All the other candi-
dates for his post were from the old school.'
Is Gil not inexperienced in office work?
'He doesn't need experience that's bullshit.'
At 10 at night, Gil appears on stage in
immaculately pressed white trousers, a
crimson shirt and white trainers. He opens
the show with Marley's 'Lively Up Yourself
pulling the audience towards the stage, and
follows with samba-reggae covers of Them
Belly Full', 'Three Little Birds', 'Could You
Be Loved?', and others from his repertoire
of Brazilian classics, including a sultry Girl
from Ipanema'. The girls are dancing: Gil
1. Silvio Berlusconi The former cruise-
ship crooner turned billionaire Italian
Prime Minister plans to release an
album of self-penned love ballads, also
featuring guitarist Mariano Apicella.
2. Tony Blair Remains an amateur
guitarist, following the failure of Ugly
Rumours, the band he set up while at
Oxford to emulate the Grateful Dead.
3. Sonny Bono The original pop
politician- husband of Cher in 1963,
Mayor of Palm Springs in 1988, elected
to the House of Representatives in 1994,
representing California's 44th District.
Died in a skiing accident in 1998.
4. Junichro Koizumi The Japanese
PM released a personal selection of his
favourite Elvis songs two years ago and
performed some of the King's hits with
Tom Cruise, no less, earlier this year.
5. Ignacy Jan Paderewski The Polish
Prime Minister was also a leading
classical composer and pianist.
6. Tony Benn Released a selection of
his favourite speeches set to hip hop
beats by Charles Bailey last month
7. Václav Havel The playwright cum-
Czech President's admiration of the
Velvet Underground led, more or less
directly to the 'Velvet Revolution of
1989, and to a friendship with Lou
Reed.
October 2003 OMM 41
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