Cesária Évora (1941-2011) was a morna singa from Cape Verde. She was known… Read Full Bio ↴Cesária Évora (1941-2011) was a morna singa from Cape Verde. She was known as the "barefoot diva" because of her propensity to appear on stage in her bare feet in support of the homeless and poor women and children of her country.
Born on the 27th August 1941 in the port town of Mindelo, Cape Verde, on the island of São Vicente. Long known as the queen of the morna, a soulful genre (related to the Portuguese fado) sung in Creole-Portuguese, she mixed her sentimental folk tunes filled with longing and sadness with the acoustic sounds of guitar, cavaquinho, violin, accordion, and clarinet. Évora's Cape Verdean blues often spoke of the country's history of isolation and slave trade, as well as emigration; almost two-thirds of the million Cape Verdeans alive live abroad.
Évora's voice, a finely-tuned, melancholy instrument with a touch of hoarseness, highlighted her emotional phrasing by accenting a word or phrase. Even audiences who do not understand her language could be held spell-bound by the emotions evident in her performances.
In 2004 she won the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary World Music Album.
A heavy smoker for decades, Évora was diagnosed with heart problems in 2005. She suffered strokes in 2008 and in September 2011, when she announced she was retiring. She died at the age of seventy in São Vicente, Cape Verde on the 17th December 2011 from respiratory failure and hypertension. A Spanish newspaper reported that forty-eight hours before her death she was still receiving people in her home in Mindelo, popular for always having its doors open.
Born on the 27th August 1941 in the port town of Mindelo, Cape Verde, on the island of São Vicente. Long known as the queen of the morna, a soulful genre (related to the Portuguese fado) sung in Creole-Portuguese, she mixed her sentimental folk tunes filled with longing and sadness with the acoustic sounds of guitar, cavaquinho, violin, accordion, and clarinet. Évora's Cape Verdean blues often spoke of the country's history of isolation and slave trade, as well as emigration; almost two-thirds of the million Cape Verdeans alive live abroad.
Évora's voice, a finely-tuned, melancholy instrument with a touch of hoarseness, highlighted her emotional phrasing by accenting a word or phrase. Even audiences who do not understand her language could be held spell-bound by the emotions evident in her performances.
In 2004 she won the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary World Music Album.
A heavy smoker for decades, Évora was diagnosed with heart problems in 2005. She suffered strokes in 2008 and in September 2011, when she announced she was retiring. She died at the age of seventy in São Vicente, Cape Verde on the 17th December 2011 from respiratory failure and hypertension. A Spanish newspaper reported that forty-eight hours before her death she was still receiving people in her home in Mindelo, popular for always having its doors open.
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Cesaria
Cesária Évora Lyrics
Areia De Salamansa Na areia di Salamansa Mi ma bô so ta anda' Mar brabo…
Consedjo Spiá caminho nha fidjo matcho Bisiá caminho nha fidja femêa…
D'Nhirim Reforma Antes d'bô pensá na pôme na peite Ojá c'um catá na…
Doce Guerra Oi Cabo Verde Bô qu'ê nha dor mas sublime Oi Cabo Verde B…
Flor Na Paul Valsá Bêbêl Valsá Bêbêl Valsá Bêbêl Bô mocidade 'm tá r…
Nha Cancera Ka Tem Medida Oh nha guente Nha cancera ka tem medida Oh nha guente Oh …
Oriundina Oriundina é um santinha morena Santa qui cai di céu Sê…
Petit Pays La na cêu bô ê um estrela Ki catá brilha Li na…
Rotcha 'Scribida M'bai pa rotcha scribida M'ba panha três caninha verde Con…
Tudo Dia E Dia Vivê mas devagar Ca bô tem pressa Esse mundo ê nôsso E' c…
Tudo Tem Se Limite Bô pápá ca foi foguêr Nem tampóc rochegadôr Nem marinhêr n…
Xandinha Bos odjos Xandinha Tem doçura de mel Tem magia de sol Ta …