Neha Patil (Editor)

Nélson Jacobina

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Genres
  
MPB

Years active
  
1970s–2012

Children
  
Rubinho Jacobina

Occupation(s)
  
Songwriter, guitarist

Movies
  
The House of Sand

Albums
  
Carnaval Só Ano Que Vem

Nélson Jacobina G1 Msico Nelson Jacobina morre aos 58 anos no Rio notcias em

Birth name
  
Nélson Jacobina Rocha Pires

Instruments
  
Classical guitar, electric guitar, acoustic guitar

Associated acts
  
Jorge Mautner Orquestra Imperial Banda Atômica

Died
  
31 May 2012, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Similar
  
Jorge Mautner, Alexandre Kassin, Rubinho Jacobina, Domenico Lancellotti, Pedro Sá

Nélson Jacobina Rocha Pires (1953 – May 31, 2012) was a Brazilian songwriter and guitarist, famous for his enduring partnership with fellow musician Jorge Mautner, with whom he wrote, among many other songs, the 1974 hit "Maracatu Atômico".

Contents

Nélson Jacobina Nelson Jacobina morre aos 58 anos Jornal O Globo

Biography

Nélson Jacobina Confira imagens da carreira de Nelson Jacobina Jornal O Globo

Jacobina was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1953. His father, Nelcy Rocha Pires, was a chivalry officer for the Brazilian Army, and his mother, Eloá Jacobina, was a translator and screenwriter. Nelcy died in 1954, when Nélson was only 1 year old, and Eloá eventually remarried filmmaker Fernando Coni Campos. Nélson had three other brothers, one of them being Rubinho Jacobina, also a musician.

Nélson Jacobina httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediapt003Nel

Jacobina discovered his vocation for music in the early 1970s, when he founded, alongside Vinicius Cantuária and Arnaldo Brandão, the MPB group Banda Atômica. In 1974 the group would open a show for Jorge Mautner, and since then Mautner and Jacobina became very close friends and musical partners; in the same year they wrote their first song together, "Maracatu Atômico". Initially performed by Mautner on his 1974 self-titled album, it would acquire higher success after being covered by Gilberto Gil and, even later, by pioneering Mangue Bit band Nação Zumbi. Among other hits written by the duo are "Lágrimas Negras" (performed by Gal Costa), "Balaio Grande" (performed by Dorival Caymmi) and "Andar com Fé" (performed by Gilberto Gil). In 1988 he and Mautner released the collaborative album Árvore da Vida. In 1997 they released another collaborative album, Estilhaços de Paixão, alongside Celso Sim.

Nélson Jacobina Msico Nelson Jacobina morre no Rio de Janeiro Msica iG

In 2002 Jacobina served as a guest musician on synthpop band Metrô third studio album, Déjà-Vu, providing some acoustic guitar passages. Later on he founded the big band Orquestra Imperial alongside many other icons of MPB and Brazilian rock such as Rodrigo Amarante (of Los Hermanos fame), Moreno Veloso, Domenico Lancellotti, Alexandre Kassin, Nina Becker, Thalma de Freitas and Wilson das Neves. Jacobina served as the band's guitarist until 2012, when he died at age 58 of lung cancer on May 31; he was diagnosed with the disease as early as 2008. Orquestra Imperial had finished and released its second studio album a couple of months before Jacobina's death.

Nélson Jacobina YOU GO TO MY HEAD Nelson Jacobina e Diana Dasha YouTube

Songs

ObsessãoCarnaval Só Ano Que Vem · 2006
Era bomCarnaval Só Ano Que Vem · 2006
Não foi em vãoCarnaval Só Ano Que Vem · 2006

References

Nélson Jacobina Wikipedia