BEIJING, Jan. 9 --
Lisa Ono is known as the "Queen of bossa nova" in China and her adoring
public will no doubt be clamoring for tickets when she performs her first
concert in the capital city this weekend.
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Lisa Ono is known as the "Queen of bossa
nova" in China and her adoring public will no doubt be clamoring for
tickets when she performs her first concert in the capital city this
weekend. (Photo:chinadaily.com.cn) Photo
Gallery>>> |
The Japanese songbird is celebrating the 20th
anniversary of her musical career and will take the stage at Beijing's Olympic
Sports Center Gymnasium on Saturday, as part of her 2009 World Tour Live.
She will then fly south to play for the Shanghai
International Jazz Festival, appearing at the 8,000-seat Shanghai Grand Stage on
January 16.
Ono is back by public demand. At her two concerts in
Shanghai's Fuxing Park last year, the venue was sold out, hence the larger space
this time around.
How the 46-year-old singer became the "queen of bossa
nova" is a curious story.
Born in Sao Paolo, Brazil, Ono moved to Tokyo, aged
10, where her father opened a club and she started singing and playing acoustic
guitar.
She later became a songwriter and "popular music
ambassador" for Brazil, specializing in bossa nova, a musical style that evolved
in the late 1950s and has become part of the standard jazz repertoire.
"When I first heard bossa nova I was very young and
fell in love with it. For me, it is the air that I breathe," Ono says.
She became a well-known figure in Japan because of
her music, initially, then starred in a number of commercials that raised her
profile further.
She released her debut album, "Catupiry", in 1989 and
since then has released about one album a year for the past two decades.
She has won various jazz awards in Japan and Brazil
and extended her fan base in Europe with a France-inspired disc "In My Island".
Ono sings primarily in Portuguese but impressed her
Shanghai audiences last year with a version of the Chinese classic "Ye Lai
Xiang". She is expected to cover the song again in Beijing.
"It was the first time I had sung bossa nova in
Chinese. It seems the audiences loved the rearrangement," Ono says. "The 'Ye Lai
Xiang' melody is sweet, soft and fits bossa nova, which is free and relaxed."
(Source: CRIENGLISH. com)