Criolo Explained

Criolo
Birth Name:Kleber Cavalcante Gomes
Birth Date:5 September 1975
Origin:São Paulo, Brazil
Instrument:Phonic
Genre:Hip hop, MPB, samba-rock, soul, Afrobeat
Occupation:Rapper, songwriter
Years Active:1989-present
Associated Acts:Emicida Marcelo D2 MV Bill
Website:http://www.criolo.net/

Kleber Cavalcante Gomes (São Paulo, September 5, 1975) artistically known as Criolo and previously as Criolo Doido is a Brazilian rapper and songwriter, four times nominated to the Latin Grammy Awards. With a career starting in 1989, he was originally known in Brazil as the creator of Rinha dos MC's, but has gained worldwide attention for his solo work and, in particular, the album Nó Na Orelha (2011). In 2019, he was nominated for two Latin Grammy Awards, for "Boca de Lobo" (Best Music Video, Short Version) and "Etérea" (Best Song in Portuguese).[1] In 2022, he was nominated again for two Latin Grammy Awards, for "Sobre Viver" (Best Rock or Alternative Album) and "Me Corte Na Boca Do Céu - A Morte Não Pede Perdão" (Best Song in Portuguese).[2]

Early life and career

Born to migrants from the North East of Brazil in the commercial hub of São Paulo, Criolo was born in the 'Favela das Imbuias', one of the many shanty towns that girdle the city.

Since the age of 11, Criolo concentrated on his love for rap, performing in small venues around his neighbourhood for many years before finally releasing his debut album ‘‘Ainda Há Tempo’’ in 2006.[3] This led to a reputation as one of the most important rappers in São Paulo. In 2011, he released his second album, “Nó na Orelha”, which was produced by Daniel Ganjaman and Marcelo Cabral. "Nó na Orelha" was released internationally in 2012, thus spreading Criolo's popularity beyond São Paulo and Brazil to other countries, leading to live shows in Adelaide, Amsterdam, Berlin, Cannes, Dijon, Ghent, Glasgow, Leuven, Lisbon, Los Angeles, London, Manchester, New York, Ozark, Paris, Rome, Roskilde, Saint-Florent, Saint-Nazaire, San Isidro, Sete, and Vence.[4]

His fourth album Espiral de Ilusão, focused on samba, was elected the 6th best Brazilian album of 2017 by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone.[5] The album was accompanied by the first issue of Criolo magazine and Criolo was awarded best samba singer of the year by Brazilian Music Awards because of it. All his projects since 2010 are released by his record label, Oloko Records, by his manager Beatriz Berjeaut, and his music director, Daniel Ganjaman.

In 2018, Criolo releases Boca de Lobo as single and music video (directed by Denis Cisma and Pedro Inoue).[6] The following year, 2019, he launches the Etérea project, an electronic beat song made as a homage to the Brazilian underground queer culture. Etérea music video (directed by Gil Inoue and Gabriel Dietrich) was released with a behind the scenes mini documentary with interviews with the performers and the whole project had creative direction by Tino Monetti and Pedro Inoue.[7] Both singles, with executive production by Kler Correa, were nominated to the Latin Grammy Awards 2019, as Best Music Video, Short Version and Best Song In Portuguese, respectively.[8]

In May 5, 2022, Criolo releases his fifth studio album, Sobre Viver, with 10 new unreleased tracks. Each track is represented by a different color instead of having a live music video. The album, featuring Tropkillaz, Mayra Andrade, Liniker, Milton Nascimento, MC Hariel and his mother Maria Vilani, also was completed by the release of Criolo magazine number two, a companion online publication made by Oloko Records and produced by The Codex studio.

Discography

DVDs

LP Singles

Awards and nominations

YearCategoryNominationResult
2011Video of the YearSubirusdoistiozin
Artist of the YearCriolo
Album of the YearNó na Orelha
Music of the YearNão Existe Amor em SP
Breakthrough artistCriolo
2012Video of the YearMariô
Male artistCriolo

Latin Grammy Awards

YearCategoryNominationResult[10]
2019Best Music Video, Short VersionBoca de Lobo
Best Song In PortugueseEtérea
YearCategoryNominationResult[11]
2022Best Song In Portuguese LanguageMe Corte Na Boca Do Céu - A Morte Não Pede Perdão
Best Rock or Alternative AlbumSobre Viver

References

  1. Web site: 20a Entrega Anual del Latin GRAMMY. Latin GRAMMYs. es. 2019-09-26.
  2. Web site: 23a Entrega Anual del Latin GRAMMY. Latin GRAMMYs. es. 2019-09-26.
  3. Web site: Art Soothes The Soul, It Calms Us, Gives Us Warmth: An Interview with Criolo. 2012-11-14. Sounds and Colours. en-GB. 2019-09-26.
  4. Web site: Criolo Gigography, Tour History & Past Concerts – Songkick. www.songkick.com. April 13, 2024 .
  5. Melhores Discos Nacionais de 2017 . Rolling Stone Brasil . Grupo Spring de Comunicação . 25 January 2019 . 2017.
  6. Web site: 'Boca de Lobo': a walk into the wolf's den with Criolo's last video about Brazil's social emergency. Sousa. Kino. 2018-10-05. Pan African Music. en-UK. 2019-09-26.
  7. Web site: Criolo Honours LGBTQ Community with Latest Song 'Etérea'. 2019-03-11. Sounds and Colours. en-GB. 2019-09-26.
  8. Web site: 20a Entrega Anual del Latin GRAMMY. Latin GRAMMYs. es. 2019-09-26.
  9. Web site: Veja a lista de vencedores do 29º Prêmio da Música Brasileira. G1. August 16, 2018 . pt-br. 2019-09-26.
  10. Web site: 20a Entrega Anual del Latin GRAMMY. Latin GRAMMYs. en. 2019-09-26.
  11. Web site: 20a Entrega Anual del Latin GRAMMY. Latin GRAMMYs. en. 2019-09-26.

Further reading