“I feel music is very spiritual in my case.” Puga Lareo furthers, “It’s not that cerebral or that calculated, it’s a true expression of my heart and my soul. For me, music is a place of healing, of beauty, of spirituality and harmony. That’s all I want.”
While some of her first venues abroad included the Manna House Theatre in Harlem, Saint Peter’s Church (aka the Jazz Church) in midtown Manhattan, and The Bernice Brooks tv show, Puga Lareo also gave performances at the Symphony Hall of the Kraków Filharmonia, the Jazz Nad Odra Festival in Wrocław, and Poland Tour with Kuba Stankiewicz International Quartet. She worked with French film music composer and pianist, Jean-Michel Bernard, acclaimed Polish pianist Andrzej Jagodzinski’s Trio in Buenos Aires, with Chilean jazz fusion legend Roberto Lecaros and The Lecaros Clan in Chile, and Robert Anchipolovsky at a concert in Tel Aviv.
Citing such singers as Gal Costa, Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson, Natalie Cole and Diana Krall as major influences, Puga Lareo has developed a hybrid style that easily embraces the nuances of both Brazilian music and jazz. “I’ve been immersed in music my entire life and there are so many sounds and musical dialects swimming inside my head,” she explained. “My dad used to play jazz records at the breakfast table when I was a baby, but my real discovery of jazz happened much later as an adult. There is also a strong classical history from my mother’s side of the family. Going to the Opera House since I was a very small girl had a huge impact on me.”
While still in Buenos Aires, Maria recorded Bob Telson’s Bagdad Cafe’s theme “Calling You,” which began a close musical partnership with the Academy Award, Pulitzer, Tony, and GRAMMY nominee. Together they enjoyed sold-out shows performing Telson’s various compositions that Maria describes as treasures and which had been sung in the past by such illustrious vocalists as Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole, George Benson, Joe Cocker, k.d. Lang, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa and George Michael. Significant in her collaborations with Telson is their duet on “Show Me Your Face,” which also features Wynton Marsalis on trumpet.
After relocating to Los Angeles in 2014, Puga Lareo’s career was dramatically interrupted by a breast cancer diagnosis. She forged through that very fierce battle and emerged cancer-free, subsequently performing and recording with an inner circle of L.A.’s premiere jazz musicians, including the Nan Schwartz Ensemble, Bobby Shew Quintet, John Beasley, Bill Cunliffe, Mitch Forman, Larry Koonse, Gary Novak, Darek Oles, Alan Pasqua, Otmaro Ruiz and Arturo Sandoval, as well as her current band members Josh Nelson, Mike Valerio, Christian Euman and Leo Amuedo.
Maria and renowned L.A. saxophonist Bob Sheppard met at the birthday party of a mutual friend and instantly hit it off. They were later married on August 9, 2017, and have been collaborating in life and on musical projects ever since.
Sheppard co-produced and is prominently featured on My Universe, engaging in some spirited call-and-response with his wife on a swinging rendition of the jazz standard “The Song Is You,” matching her scatting abandon stride-for-stride on a Nan Schwartz arrangement of “We’ll Be Together Again,” and riding over a power horn, funk original “At the End of the Night.”
Viva The Latin Jazz!!
www.jazzcaribe.blogspot.com
Email: jazzcaribe2001@yahoo.com
Note: The bestselling book of music literature "The Bible of Latin Jazz" by musicologist Luis Raul Montell is available on Amazon.
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