Gilberto Gil's Discography: 'All albums have a biography' - Part 1

Writer of other biographies for Brazilian music albums gives an overview of Gilberto Gil’s records, which contain experiences and reflections.

By Instituto Gilberto Gil

Text: Chris Fuscaldo*, journalist and music researcher

Gilberto Gil em ensaio fotográfico de João Wainer (2009-09-28)Instituto Gilberto Gil

“Each record is tied to a period of my life, with its own characteristics that influence repertoire, creation, songwriting, and the making of the album, its sonority and musicians invited…

“… I make records with a very strong existential dimension. All of them. From the first ones, the experimental ones I recorded in Bahia, 78 rpm.”

Gilberto Gil

We definitely can’t analyze Gilberto Gil’s work without going at least a bit deeper into the knowledge of his life story and his thinking. The singer, songwriter, guitar player, and political himself acknowledges that the singles which debuted his phonographic career allowed for experiments, so he would be ready for his LP release.

Gilberto Gil e Tuzé de Abreu em estúdio na década de 1970 (1976)Instituto Gilberto Gil

“That was me starting to become familiarized with studios, the recording system.”

Gilberto Gil

Gilberto Gil e Flora Gil em estúdio na gravação da música Vamos Fugir para o álbum Raça Humana (1984-04)Instituto Gilberto Gil

After he was “familiarized,” Gilberto Gil just had to understand the feelings of each moment to then go into the studio dedicated to throw them into each of his vinyls.

Gilberto Gil em estúdio na década de 1970Instituto Gilberto Gil

And let’s remember that, to match his always full schedule, his albums are so filled with experiences that there are many of them: just with original songs, he has over 20 records. With the collective albums, those recorded live, and the soundtracks, the list goes up to almost 80.

Parte da Família Gil posa com álbuns de Gilberto Gil para matéria do caderno Ela, do jornal O Globo (Agosto de 2017)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Gil bears fruits, and proof is that he had eight children with three of his four wives. Before his national debut, he had Nara (1966) and Marília (1967) with Belina, his first wife. It was after their birth that his recording career took off. Before that, he created some jingles and released singles.

Capa do compacto Sua Música, Sua Interpretação, de Gilberto Gil (1963)Instituto Gilberto Gil

The first singles

Before this shared LP debut, Gil released a few compacts back in Bahia—both single and double—and, in 1962, some in the 78 rpm format. In 1963, what can be considered his first solo album was released: an EP with four songs called Sua Música e sua Interpretação.

Gilberto Gil recebe o disco de platina pelo compacto Não Chore Mais (1979)Instituto Gilberto Gil

In São Paulo, he recorded two singles, one in 1965 and another in 1967. 
The singles’ predecessor would forever be in his history.

Capa do álbum Louvação, de Gilberto Gil (1967)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Procissão
00:00

The first solo album

In the same year he performed “Domingo no parque” at the III Brazilian Popular Music Festival, in 1967, Gil would finally release a 12-track LP: Louvação was a gathering of what he had brought with him from Bahia, a mix of folklore (“Procissão”) and science (“Lunik 9”).

Gilberto Gil em caminhada na década de 1960 (1966)Instituto Gilberto Gil

During the promotion of this record in Pernambuco, where he met local artists and trends, Gil identified the ideas that Caetano Veloso had already brought to the conversations they exchanged. From folklore, he went to the mix of rhythms, styles, philosophies and behaviors.

Capa do álbum Gilberto Gil, de Gilberto Gil (1968)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Domingo No Parque por Gilberto Gil
00:00

Tropicalist on fire

With Gilberto Gil, an album from 1968, he consolidated tropicalism in sound, cover, and attitude: the artist from Bahia shook up bossa nova and rock, mixing the trending rhythms of the time and defending causes through music at a time when the military dictatorship dominated Brazilian politics.

Gilberto Gil no III Festival Internacional da Canção Popular (1968-09-14)Instituto Gilberto Gil

The version of Procissão on this record features guitars and rasping vocals from the Mutantes. There, he showed a little bit of the mix that would impress listeners in Brazil and around the world forever.

Lado A do compacto de 1968 de Gilberto Gil, lançado pela gravadora Phillips (1968)Instituto Gilberto Gil

This was then proved in October 2007, when the album made it to Rolling Stone Brazil’s 100 greatest records in Brazilian music list, in 78th place.


In the image, the single released before the LP.

Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso e Gal Costa (1967)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Approximation with Tropicalism

Gilberto Gil considers his first albums a kind of approximation with the tropicalist movement, which he founded alongside Caetano Veloso and joined by maestro Rogério Duprat.

Besides them, the movement singer Gal Costa, the band Mutantes, singer and songwriter Tom Zé, lyricists Torquato Neto and Capinan, and even Nara Leão, originally a bossa nova singer.

Capa do álbum Tropicália ou Panis Et Circencis, de Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, Mutantes, Tom Zé, Nara Leão, acompanhados dos poetas Capinam e Torquato Neto e do maestro Rogério Duprat (1968)Instituto Gilberto Gil

With those names, Gil planned and released the Tropicália ou Panis et Circencis, a fusion of Brazilian music and rock, which went into history as one of Brazilian music’s greatest feats.

Contracapa do álbum Tropicália ou Panis Et Circencis, de Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, Mutantes, Tom Zé, Nara Leão, acompanhados dos poetas Capinam e Torquato Neto e do maestro Rogério Duprat (1968)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Capa do álbum Gilberto Gil, de Gilberto Gil (1969)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Cérebro Eletrônico
00:00

Rethinking our role as human beings

Another eponymous record, Gilberto Gil, also known by its “last name” Cérebro Eletrônico, was released in 1969, the year Gil was liberated from prison and went into exile in England. With Caetano Veloso, he was one of the artists persecuted by the military dictatorship in Brazil.

The track “Cérebro eletrônico” didn’t get much attention at the time, but it is a mark for the importance of a human being as superior to the machines. This was something that permeated Gil’s thinking in prison, where he was unfairly kept for two months and wrote the song.

Lado A do compacto de 1969 de Gilberto Gil, lançado pela gravadora Phillips (1969)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Aquele Abraço
00:00

The biggest success of this album was announced through a single released before the LP: Aquele Abraço was a kind of farewell to the country inspired by the catchphrase of comedian Lilico, repeated by the military, which Gil heard while in prison.

In the image, the single Aquele Abraço.

Gilberto Gil e o Conjunto Folclórico Viva Bahia no show Barra 69, apresentado com Caetano Veloso antes do exílio (1969-07-20)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Farewell into exile

Collective and live albums also permeated the singer-songwriter's career. The first live one was recorded in 1969, at Caetano and Gil's show to raise funds for their exile trip, and released only three years later, when they returned to Brazil.

Capa do álbum Barra 69, de Gilberto Gil e Caetano Veloso (1969 (gravação) e 1972 (lançamento))Instituto Gilberto Gil

The 1969 show at Teatro Castro Alves, in Salvador, was held in three sessions, the first of which was on the day man stepped on the moon. The name Barra 69: Caetano e Gil ao Vivo was an idea by singer Gal Costa at the time of its release, in 1972.

Caetano Veloso e Gilberto Gil no show Barra 69, apresentado antes da partida para o exílio (1969-07-20)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Over the years, the myth was created (or not) that those performances, and the duo's departure to Europe, marked the end of the Tropicalista movement.

Capa do álbum Gilberto Gil, de Gilberto Gil (1971)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Can't Find My Way Home by Gilberto Gil
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Songs of exile

First-born to Sandra Gadelha, Pedro was born in London, in 1970. In 1971, Gil recorded and released his fourth album, (again) called Gilberto Gil. What he was experiencing culminated on an English repertoire, including a reinterpretation of the “Can't Find my Way Home” (Steve Winwood).

Gilberto Gil autografa para uma fã o livro Gilberto Gil Expresso 2222, ao lado de Antonio Risério e Jorge Mautner (1989)Instituto Gilberto Gil

The Three Mushrooms por Gilberto Gil no álbum homônimo de 1971
00:00

His first encounter with singer and songwriter Jorge Mautner—who was coming from his exile in the United States to London to meet Gil and Caetano—produced there tracks for this album: “The Three Mushrooms,” “Babylon,” and “Crazy Pop Rock.”

Capa do álbum Expresso 2222, de Gilberto Gil (1972)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Chiclete com Banana
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Back to life

The following year, Gil returned to Brazil, which he had never wanted to leave. In his happiness, he released Expresso 2222, a lively album, with a “Brazilianess” that verges on activism. “Chiclete com banana,” for instance, challenges Uncle Sam to “get a tambourine,” saying [in literal translation]:

Gilberto Gil em ensaio fotográfico na Casa Redonda (1968)Instituto Gilberto Gil

I want to see Uncle Sam with a pot
During a Brazilian drumming.


This album also came 26th among the greatest in Brazilian music according to the Rolling Stone list 2007.

Capa do álbum Temporada de Verão, de Caetano Veloso e Gal Costa (1974)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Ending the longing

After returning from exile, Gil and Caetano returned to live intensely in Bahia. In 1974, they teamed up with Gal Costa to record and release Temporada de Verão: Ao Vivo na Bahia, at Teatro Vila Velha, in Salvador.

Capa do álbum Gilberto Gil Ao Vivo, de Gilberto Gil (1974)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Also in 1974, in August, Preta was born, the second child with Sandra. In October, Gil takes the stage at Teatro Tuca (São Paulo) to record the LP Gilberto Gil: Ao Vivo. In the repertoire, only unpublished songs that show Gil's freedom on stage: João Sabino is more than 11 minutes long.

Gilberto Gil durante seu período de exílio em Londres (1970)Instituto Gilberto Gil

Continues in Part 2.

Credits: Story

Exhibit credits

Research and text: Chris Fuscaldo (*author of Discobiografia Legionária and Discobiografia Mutante: Álbuns que Revolucionaram a Música Brasileira)
Assembly: Patrícia Sá Rêgo


General credits

Editing and curation: Chris Fuscaldo / Garota FM 
Musical content research: Ceci Alves, Chris Fuscaldo, Laura Zandonadi and Ricardo Schott 
Ministry of Culture content research: Carla Peixoto, Ceci Alves, Chris Fuscaldo 
Captions: Anna Durão, Carla Peixoto, Ceci Alves, Chris Fuscaldo, Daniel Malafaia, Fernanda Pimentel, Gilberto Porcidonio, Kamille Viola, Laura Zandonadi, Lucas Vieira, Luciana Azevedo, Patrícia Sá Rêgo, Pedro Felitte, Ricardo Schott, Roni Filgueiras e Tito Guedes 
Data editing: Isabela Marinho and Marco Konopacki
Gege Produções Review: Cristina Doria
Acknowledgements Gege Produções, Gilberto Gil, Flora Gil, Gilda Mattoso, Fafá Giordano, Maria Gil, Meny Lopes, Nelci Frangipani, Cristina Doria, Daniella Bartolini e todos os autores das fotos e personagens da história
All media: Instituto Gilberto Gil
*Every effort has been made to credit the images, audios and videos and correctly tell the story about the episodes narrated in the exhibitions. If you find errors and/or omissions, please contact us by email atendimentogil@gege.com.br

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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