Tim Maia

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About Tim Maia

The father of Brazilian soul music, Tim Maia never hid his true nature from his fans, his prospective employers, or the law. Iconoclastic, ironic, outspoken, polemical (but always humorous), and openly addicted to cocaine and marijuana, he was known for lightheartedly missing appointments and even big-time gigs, and for being boycotted by recording companies, major TV networks such as Globo, and other media that didn't swallow his disturbing presence. With his potent and flexible baritone, Maia was able to convey not only a happy and energetic dance feel, but was capable of inspiring sentiment in otherwise corny songs as well, like his hit "Me dê Motivo." Throughout his career, this flexibility was evidenced through the multitude of styles he embraced: soul, funk, bossa nova (in the '90s), romantic songs, American pop, samba, baião, and MPB. In the '70s, Maia started to record albums and play shows promoting his indigenous synthesis of American soul and Brazilian music with elements of samba and baião. The movement gradually took the working-class suburbs of the north side of Rio de Janeiro by storm, exploding in 1976 with the black movement. In the '90s, he was discovered by younger pop stars, who re-recorded several of his hits. This was the case with Skank, Lulu Santos, Ara Ketu, Paralamas do Sucesso, and Marisa Monte, not to mention Elis Regina, Gal Costa, and other established artists. Maia started to write his earliest songs at age eight, and at 14 (as a drummer) he formed the group Os Tijucanos do Ritmo, which lasted one year. He then took guitar classes and was soon teaching the kids in the neighborhood of Tijuca, in Rio, including the Matoso gang (Maia, Jorge Ben, Erasmo Esteves, later Erasmo Carlos, and several others), named after the street where they used to hang out. In that period, Maia was the guitar teacher of Esteves, and when Roberto Carlos joined the gang in 1958, he also took classes with him. Maia, Carlos, and Esteves (together with Edson Trindade, Arlênio Lívio, and José Roberto "China") formed the group the Snacks (later the Sputniks), playing shows and performing on TV (including on Carlos Imperial's Clube do Rock on TV Continental, where Carlos was already a regular). The group soon dissolved due to incompatibility between Carlos and Maia. After his father's demise in 1959, Maia won a scholarship to study TV communications in the U.S., where he lived for four years. He started out a vocalist, having joined the Ideals, but in 1963, he was arrested for possession of marijuana. Jailed for six months and then deported to Brazil, he didn't find any warmth on the part of his old comrades Esteves and Carlos, who were beginning to enjoy the massive success of Jovem Guarda, which would grip the entire country in a few years. Moving to São Paulo, he had some support from Os Mutantes. Having recorded his first single on CBS in 1968 -- "Meu País" b/w "Sentimento," he became more visible after 1969 with "These Are the Songs," which was re-recorded by Elis Regina the next year in duet with him and included on Regina's Em Pleno Verão. In 1970, he recorded his first LP, Tim Maia (Polygram), which includes his classics "Azul da Cor do Mar," "Coroné Antônio Bento," and "Primavera." It stayed it the top carioca charts for 24 weeks. The next year, Tim Maia, Vol. 2 brought two more everlasting hits: "Não Quero Dinheiro (Só Quero Amar)" and "Preciso Aprender a Ser Só." Tim Maia, Vol. 4 (1973) had "Réu Confesso" and "Gostava Tanto de Você." Also in the '70s, he founded his own label, initially called Seroma and then Vitória Régia Discos. Infatuated with the religious/philosophic sect Cultura Racional, Maia independently launched two minor albums on Seroma in 1972: Racional, Vol. 1 and Racional, Vol. 2. Three years later, he had one of his biggest hits with "Sossego," and another success with "Acenda o Farol," both included on Tim Maia Disco Club. In 1983, he had hits with "O Descobridor dos Sete Mares" and "Me dê Motivo," from O Descobridor dos Sete Mares on Polygram. He also released Tim Maia in 1986, which included the hit "Do Leme ao Pontal (Tomo Guaraná, Suco de Caju, Goiabada Para Sobremesa)." In 1990, he interpreted bossa nova classics on a scarcely noticed album released through his Vitória Régia label, Tim Maia Interpreta Clássicos da Bossa Nova. After a period of little, if any, presence in the media, he was again noticed after being mentioned by Jorge Ben Jor in 1993 in his "W/Brasil." In the same period, Maia had a hit with his re-recording of "Como uma Onda" for a TV ad. At the same time, he withdrew from the majors, recording his next albums through Vitória Régia. These included What a Wonderful World (1997), comprising American pop/soul classics and Amigos do Rei/Tim Maia e Os Cariocas, with the famous vocal group Amigos do Rei. In March 1998 he was doing a gig at the Municipal Theater of Niterói when he became ill. Hospitalized, he died a few days later. ~ Alvaro Neder

HOMETOWN
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
BORN
28 september 1942
GENRE
MPB

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