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Singer finds her calling

Chanteuse Ana Moura visits the Southland to perform fados of her native Portugal.

April 08, 2008|Elijah Wald, Special to The Times

As a teenager in the Portuguese province of Ribatejo, northeast of Lisbon, Ana Moura sang with a local bar band. "I was doing covers of all kinds of music," she remembers, speaking in delicately accented English. "Rock, Portuguese music, soul, Brazilian, a bit of everything."

It was a basic pop gig, but each evening Moura would also sing one fado, a dark, sinuous lament that is Portugal's equivalent of the American blues or a Mexican bolero. And it is fados she will be singing Wednesday, when she comes to Santa Monica's Temple Bar.


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Oddly enough, Moura says that her shift to the more traditional style happened just as her rock career was taking off. At 19, she won an audition to make a CD with her band, and it was during the recording sessions that she went out with some friends to a bar that was hosting a fado session.

"I didn't even know it was fados that night," she recalls. "But my friends asked me to sing, and there were some guitar players there, and they invited me to go to a Christmas party where all the people from fado were going -- the poets, the musicians, the singers."

Life-changing

Moura went to the party, and her singing caught the ear of Maria da Fe, an established singer who ran a "fado house," one of the small clubs where the music is performed for aficionados.

"She invited me to work in the fado house," Moura says. "And my life changed completely. I started to live at night, because I was working at night. And I met the producer of my albums there, so I was also recording in the daytime. I had been studying music, and I had to give that up because I didn't have time. And my friends had a different life, they lived more during the day. So my life became only fado and the people from fado."

The memory sounds a little bittersweet, but Moura says she has no regrets. "Of course, when I see photos of my old friends, I sometimes feel a little bit sad," she adds. "But this was like my destiny.

"Even when I was recording my rock album, the producer noticed something in my interpretation. He asked me, 'Do you sing fado?' I told him yes, and he asked me, 'Please, sing for us one fado.' And I started to sing, and he told me, 'That's how I want you to sing rock, with this intensity.' So I think maybe this was the only way for me, that it was not possible for me to do something else."

Intimate setting

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