Robson Jorge & Lincoln Olivetti cover

Robson Jorge & Lincoln Olivetti

Released

It’s hard to find an exact parallel in the West for Brazilian keyboardist/arranger Lincoln Olivetti and guitarist Robson Jorge. What if Quincy Jones and George Benson (or else George Duke and Nile Rodgers) were session cats, dedicated to making the most bewildering boogie and exuberant funk imaginable? Starting in the mid-1970s, the two teamed up and Brazilian MPB was never the same. They produced hits for the likes of Tim Maia, Marcos Valle, Sandra Sa, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Roberto Carlos, and so many more.

This 1982 album served as calling card for their services, showcasing how they could infuse such artists with a sophisticated smoothness akin to American disco and R&B of the early ’80s. The scatted harmonizing vocals on “Jorgeia Corisco” and “Fá Sustenido” feel like placeholders rather than actual hooks (to be filled in by their clients) but it doesn’t dampen the energy, corkscrewing grooves, or catchiness one iota. And who needs any words for the feelgood chant of “Aleluia”? Olivetti’s keys and Jorge’s guitar are as tightly wound as a double helix, but they still find plenty of room for sunburst horns, astonishing charts, and finger-licking percussion. All killer, it’s a party starter no matter the country you’re in.

Andy Beta

Suggestions
Gal Costa cover

Gal Costa

Gal Costa
Muito Sol cover

Muito Sol

Ricardo Dias Gomes
Mutantes cover

Mutantes

Os Mutantes
Transa cover

Transa

Caetano Veloso
To Know Without Knowing cover

To Know Without Knowing

Mulatu Astatke, Black Jesus Experience
Feel My Love cover

Feel My Love

Vaughan Mason, Butch Dayo
Quem é Quem cover

Quem é Quem

João Donato