Product Details
The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves

The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves
Cibelle

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Track Listing

  1. Green Grass
  2. Instante de Dois
  3. Phoenix
  4. London London (features Devendra Banhart)
  5. City People
  6. Minha Neguinha
  7. Mad Man Song (features Spleen)
  8. Por Tida A Minha Vida
  9. Flying High
  10. Arrete la, Menina (features Seu Jorge)
  11. Esplendor
  12. Train Station
  13. Lembra
  14. Cajuina

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #100935 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-05-02
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Dimensions: .17 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Like no one else, Brazilian born Cibelle makes use of a variety of elements to create unique, imaginative and enchanting peices of music. Her second album (the follow-up to 2003's inspired eponymous debut) is a genuine masterpiece. Moving into even more adventurous sonic terrain than its predecesor, the "Shine Of Dried Electric Leaves" combines rootsy acoustic instrumentation, electronic processing, noise guitars & children's toys, captivating textural soundscapes & pure melodies all anchored by Cibelle's unmistakable, moving voice. Cibelle produced this album over a period of 18 months, taking some of the tracks with her from London (where she now resides) to Sao Paulo (her home town) and back, gathering along the way contributions from various co-producers and performers, including Mike Lindsay (from UK Folktronica act Tunng);Apollo Nove (the innovative producer/artist from Sao Paulo, who produced most of her debut album); Parisian mixer, Yann Arnaud (Air, ! Sebastien Schuller), and guests such as Seu Jorge (of "City of God" and "The Life Aquatic' fame), freak folk pioneer, Devendra Banhart, and CocoRosie collaborator Spleen. While some of the album's ten original compositions and three covers are simple, limpid crytalline gems (her renditions of Tom Waits' "Green Grass" and of Jobim's "Por Toda Minha Vida" to name but a few).

Amazon.com
Since her breakout performance on Suba's landmark Sao Paolo Confessions, singer Cibelle (pronounced see-Bell-ee) has enchanted Brazilian pop aficionados with her lovely musical purr. Here on her second album, the cool lounge production of her debut is pushed into a darker, more experimental realm without losing her music's sensual beauty. As ambitious as the production, the songwriting is challenging too with highlights like "Phoenix" and "Flying High" using a linear style rather than the back and forth of a verse, bridge and chorus arrangement. There's a couple of interesting covers as well--while her spare version of Tom Waits's "Green Grass" is a seemingly offbeat choice, her haunting, glitchy and near-unrecognizable cover of Jobim's "Por Toda A Minha Vida" is a different kind of surprise. With ultra-cool Apollo Nove and Tunng in the producers' chair, this subtle kind of sonic and music revision is to be expected, but it's a tribute to the singer that she keeps the challenging sound under the sway of her lovely voice. --Tad Hendrickson

Rolling Stone
"Imagine the Girl From Ipanema in Terry Gilliam's futuristic Brazil"


Customer Reviews

Experimental and beautiful electro-bossa4
Like Bebel Gilberto, Brazilian Cibelle made her name working with the ill-fated Serbian producer Suba (both starred on his first and last album "Sao Paulo Confessions"), and Cibelle's first album explored similar electro-bossa territory.

Her second outing sees her move into a much more wobbly acoustic terrain, assisted by Mike Lindsay from folktronica duo Tunng and by the Moogy Brazilian psych-funk producer Apollo Nove.

Cibelle (pronounced `see-belly', apparently) has a similarly winsome voice to Bebel Gilberto, although she doesn't sing with such a strong Brazilian accent.

She retains some links to Brazilian music: Devendra Banhart duets on a pleasingly giggly reading of Caetano Veloso's charming "London London", "The Life Aquatic" star Seu Jorge lays down some bossa nova guitar lines on "Arrête Lâ, Menina" and there's an ambient electronic version of Tom Jobim's "Por Toda a Minha Vida".

But what really transforms this album are the idiosyncratic and distinctly un-Brazilian rhythm tracks, recorded using a Matthew Herbert-ish arsenal of kitchenware (spoons, paper cups, plastic bottles, wooden boxes, etc).

Think a Brazilian Björk and you're nearly there.

Appearances Can Be Deceiving5
Check out the pose on the CD cover. Cibelle looks every inch the beautiful formal model that she is. And she wears evening gowns in concert to heighten the effect. But here is the catch: the evening gown she wore when I saw her looked like a 1960's prom model, and she was wearing it sideways. Cibelle is definitely different.

She has a great voice, but there are as many female vocalists in Brazil with great voices as their are great football players. What sets her apart is her sense of adventure. Most of her material is, in whole or in part, way out there. A veteran of the superb Suba sessions, she has continued to develop in original and startling ways. Her music is not always easy to listen to, but it is always worth the effort. The directions her songs take are often wildly unpredictable with the most sophisticated electronic embellishments quickly followed by a glockenspiel, for instance. She likes to stretch and bend rhythms and to reinvent genres, and she is obviously quite comfortable in challenging her audience. Worth noting, she doesn't just rely on fresh, daring song writers: she co-wrote half the songs on the album.

It's not a perfect album. She does the "sex kitten" vocal thing a tad too often, and some of the English lyrics probably should have stayed in Portuguese. But both those are small quibbles. She, not Bebel Gilberto, not Maria Rita, is the most important female artist to emerge in Brazil since Maria Monte, and this CD is even better than her first solo album.

Not too bad...3
I was expecting a lot more from this CD after the self titled one but while this may be a worthwile buy it will take its time to work on you.

Music wise her vocals have an upbeat feel to them and go well with the music, they kind of drift along. This is a great CD to have in your car on one of those warm days driving to work in the city.

If you are looking for anything similar to Bebel Gilberto however, as I was you may be a little disappointed at first but I asure you, listen to it a few times it will grow on you.