Yamandu Costa | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Yamandu Costa |
Born | Passo Fundo, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 24 January 1980
Genres | Música popular brasileira, choro, bossa nova, milonga, jazz, tango, samba, chamamé, Brazilian folk, instrumental, Baião |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, composer |
Instrument | Violão de sete cordas (Brazilian seven-string classical guitar) |
Years active | 1990s–present |
Spouse |
Elodie Bouny (m. 2007–2023) |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Algacir Costa and Clary Marcon |
Website | www.yamandu.com.br |
Yamandu Costa (born January 24, 1980, in Passo Fundo), sometimes spelled Yamandú, is a Brazilian guitarist and composer. His main instrument is the violão de sete cordas, the Brazilian seven-string classical guitar.
Costa began to study guitar at age seven with his father, Algacir Costa, leader of the group Os Fronteiriços (The Frontiersmen), and mastered the instrument under the guidance of Lúcio Yanel , an Argentine virtuoso, who lived in Brazil. At age fifteen, Costa began to study southern Brazilian folk music, as well as the music of Argentina and Uruguay.
Influenced by the music of Radamés Gnattali, he began to study the music of other Brazilians, such as Baden Powell de Aquino, Tom Jobim and Raphael Rabello.
At age seventeen he played in São Paulo for the first time at the Cultural Circuit Bank of Brazil; the concert was produced by Study Tone Brazil.
Yamandu Costa gained increased international recognition after he appeared in Mika Kaurismäki's 2005 documentary film Brasileirinho. The film showcased the vibrant world of Brazilian choro music and featured Costa’s impressive guitar skills, which helped him reach a broader audience. While he was already an established musician in Brazil, the documentary played a significant role in elevating his profile internationally.
Costa's diverse styles include choro, bossa nova, milonga, tango, samba and chamamé.
His 2019 album Vento Sul was considered one of the 25 best Brazilian albums of the second half of 2019 by the São Paulo Association of Art Critics.[1]
In 2021, his album Toquinho e Yamandu Costa - Bachianinha (Live at Rio Montreux Jazz Festival) (with Toquinho) won the Latin Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Album.[2]