Watch Out, Tom Jobim and Elis Regina
There is a new contender for Greatest Version of World’s Greatest Song:
Thanks to reader A.C. in San Francisco for the link.
Below are Atlantic notes, from James Fallows with suggestions from many readers, about the lasting effects of the song that Brazilian listeners chose as their country’s greatest musical creation, Águas de Março, by Antonio Carlos “Tom” Jobim.
There is a new contender for Greatest Version of World’s Greatest Song:
Thanks to reader A.C. in San Francisco for the link.
If you follow (or have heard of) the Brazilian experimental-percussion group Uakti, you probably are already aware that they have done their own interpretation of The World’s Greatest Song, Águas de Março by Antonio Carlos “Tom” Jobim.
If, like me, you hadn’t known about Uakti, then this version will be as new to you as it is to me. Very much as with the marvelous David Bowie-Marisa Montes interpretation mentioned earlier, the group is clearly playing with the song, rather than just playing it. But worth knowing about and listening to.
Tim Heffernan, who previously sleuthed out the Slovenian rendition of Aguas, came up with this one too.