From the blog

For a dose of great Brazilian jazz and samba, don’t miss O Som Do Jazz Saturday in the Side Door

We’re excited about the return of the great Brazilian jazz band, O Som Do Jazz. They’ll be back in one of their favorite venues – the Palladium Side Door – on Saturday night, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m.

 

The last time the band played – on a sold-out night last summer – they debuted their new album – A Kiss For Rio. You’ll hear lots of songs from that album on Saturday and other O Som favorites.

 

To get you ready, check out this story from the Tampa Bay Times published in advance of last summer’s show. It was written by the much-missed John Fleming, who retired from the Times soon after this article was published.

 

 

By John Fleming

Times Staff Writer

 

David Manson is one of the most versatile musicians around.

 

O SomA trombonist, he has played in the orchestras of touring shows at performing arts centers in the area. A well-traveled symphony player, he sat in with the Florida Orchestra on numerous occasions. As a jazz man, he was a member of a free-bop group called Shim, and he has presented many avant-garde groups in the past 18 years through his concert series Emit. He was in the brass section and did arrangements for the Frank Zappa tribute band Bogus Pomp.

 

Now Manson is into Brazilian music with his crack seven-piece band called O Som Do Jazz, featuring his Rio de Janeiro-born wife, Andrea Moraes Manson, on vocals. They have a sparkling new CD out, A Kiss for Rio, that will be introduced Thursday at a concert in St. Petersburg.

 

“I always liked Brazilian music, but I didn’t know it very deeply. A lot of what I heard was very Americanized — cool stuff like Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66 — and it was Andrea who showed me the real Brazilian music,” Manson said. The two met at a block party in St. Petersburg and were married in 2002.

 

A Kiss for Rio has a loungey bossa nova vibe, with a dozen tracks more or less equally divided among songs with Portuguese and English lyrics and instrumentals. The Mansons wrote nine of the tunes, and the others are by Brazilian masters such as Joao Donato, whose infectious Sambou, Sambou opens the album.

 

Andrea Moraes Manson, who was an architect in Brazil, is a languid, laid-back singer with a stylish mix of lyricism and rhythmic funk. Liberally sprinkled throughout the album are hot solos by band members, including sax player Austin Vickrey, guitarist Alfredo Rivero and Manson on trombone.

 

The CD was recorded at the Mansons’ home in St. Petersburg. “Everything is so easy to do now in terms of recording,” said Manson, who teaches a course on music and computers at St. Petersburg College. “You can set up your gear in your house and record and it’ll sound as good as a professional studio 10 years ago.”

 

Manson, 57, has seven albums to his credit, mostly free jazz, improvisation and electronica, and his foray into Brazilian music with O Som Do Jazz is a departure for him. “I like experimental music, but I really like this Brazilian music, which is the polar opposite,” he said. “There’s just something about it. It’s heartfelt music.”

 

For tickets and information, visit www.mypalladium.org or call the box office at 727 822-3590.

 

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