Nana Caymmi | |
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Background information | |
Born | April 29, 1941 |
Genres | música popular brasileira |
Instrument | vocals |
Labels | EMI |
Nana Caymmi (b. Dinahir Tostes Caymmi, April 29, 1941) is a Brazilian singer.[1] Caymmi was born in Rio de Janeiro, the daughter of Dorival Caymmi and Stella Maris. Her first appearance on record was on her father's album Acalanto. She married Venezuelan doctor Gilberto Aponte Paoli and moved there in 1959. She and her husband divorced in 1966, at which time she moved back to Rio. At this time, she became involved with the Tropicalia movement; she became romantically involved with Gilberto Gil, whom she married in 1967 and divorced the year thereafter. In 1966, she sang "Saveiros" at the first Festival Internacional da Canção in Rio, and won first place in the national phase of the competition, despite boos from the crowd, who preferred Gal Costa's rendition of Gil's "Minha Senhora".[2]
Caymmi became a controversial figure, not at home in the Tropicalia scene nor in the protest song movement. Only marginally successful, she found work singing in Portuguese language nightclubs outside of Brazil in South America. In the 1980s, she recorded several albums for EMI and appeared in the 1983 documentary Bahia de Todos os Sambas. In the 1990s, she became more successful in the mainstream with her album Bolero, which was her first of several gold albums. In 1995 and 1998, she was named Best Female Singer of the Year by the APCA.[2] In 2010, the French film director Georges Gachot released a documentary film, Rio Sonata, about Caymmi.
Her 2013 album, Caymmi, with brothers Dori Caymmi and Danilo Caymmi, was nominated for the 2014 Latin Grammy Award for Best MPB Album.[3] In 2019, she received another nomination in the same category, this time for the album Nana Caymmi Canta Tito Madi.[4] In 2021, she received another nomination, this time in the Album of the Year category, for the album Nana, Tom, Vinícius.[5]