At 7 pm it is ‘out of the loop’, Sophia Ardessore launches ‘Porto de Paz’

At 7 pm it is ‘out of the loop’, Sophia Ardessore launches ‘Porto de Paz’


The singer produced by bassist Fi Maróstica emerges as a promising figure of her generation

today of Sofia Ardessore, what it does here and now, is a hope. At the age of 19, this young singer who started studying music at seven and teaching piano, singing and guitar at 11, launches a carefully curated album in compositions and arrangements like a jewel, with eight unreleased songs and the re-recording of Giovanni’s raft, by Filo Machado. Away from the beaten track, Sophia searches for new material with very good people who live far from the already worn-out copyright circles.

She is hope because her refined concept of a song, outside the box, breaks the lines of a scenario of female voices worked in two or three languages ​​so disruptive that they have already become predictable. Sophia’s album is called haven of peace and owes part of its victories to the arranger and producer Fi Maróstica. Fi is a cleaner, he uses silences to scare away the sounds that matter, like in beauty Danger, by Vidal Assis, and lets the flow flow without obstructing the melody. As a bass player, he also has the fundamental groove of samba like Who said I saidby Vidal and Joyce Moreno, and the sense of reduction it leaves behind Glass of water, yours with Chica Barreto, something very special. There is a strength beyond Sophia’s voice that is perhaps as precious as she is. It’s a way of thinking about the song as a whole when faced with a composition like Silence, another from Vidal Assis. Or experiment with the voice with another intention of singing beautiful things like the amorous one haven of peace.

Source: Terra

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