Arnaldo Antunes (Portuguese pronunciation:[aʁˈnawduɐ̃ˈtunis], born Arnaldo Augusto Nora Antunes Filho, September 2, 1960) is a Brazilian musician, writer, and composer. He was a member of the rock band
Titãs, which he co-founded in 1982 and left ten years later. After 1992, he embarked on a solo career. He has published poetry and had his first book published in 1983. He has worked with
Marisa Monte,
Tribalistas, and
Carlinhos Brown.
Childhood
Arnaldo was born on September 2, 1960, to Arnaldo Augusto Nora Antunes and Dora Leme Ferreira. He was the fourth of seven children.[1] In 1967, he enrolled in Luís de Camões school and studied there until 1972. During the following year, he attended
PUC SP, where he first got involved with the local art scene. In 1975 he met
Paulo Miklos, a classmate at Colégio Equipe. In 1978, he went to study
Portuguese and
literature at
USP.[2]
Career with Titãs
In 1979, Antunes formed his first band, Banda Performática, with his then-wife. In 1982,
Titãs do Iê-Iê was formed, with Antunes as a founder. In 1984, they release their
self-titled debut album. In 1992, Antunes decided to leave Titãs, after recording seven albums with the band, due to musical differences. His departure was announced on 15 December 1992.[3]
In November 1985, he was arrested for
heroin trafficking after the police found 128 mg of the drug in his apartment in São Paulo. The officers arrived there after arresting his Titãs bandmate
Tony Bellotto, who was found with 30 mg in a taxi after leaving Antunes's place. Due to the quantity that Antunes had at home, he was accused of trafficking while Bellotto was only charged with possession. At the precinct, he was put in an individual cell, since the sheriff considered imprudent to put him among 90 dangerous robbers.[4]
Solo career
In 1993 he released his solo debut album Nome, a "multimedia project associating poetry and music", featuring
João Donato,
Marisa Monte and
Arto Lindsay as guest stars, and short computer animation features (produced in collaboration with Celia Catunda, Kiko Mistrorigo and Zaba Moreau). The Nome video was shown in art venues and festivals in Brazil, Italy, Argentina, Australia, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, France, Spain (where it received a Jury recommendation at the Festival International de Video Cidade de Vigo 1995), Netherlands, Monaco, Uruguay, Cuba, Chile, Colombia and the US (receiving an honorable mention at the first annual New York Video Festival).
As a solo artist, Arnaldo Antunes later released Ninguém (1995), O Silêncio (1996), Um Som (1998), Paradeiro (2001) and Saiba (Rosa Celeste/BMG 2004). He also released other albums in special projects, such as O Corpo (1999), a specially produced soundtrack for Grupo Corpo, a dance company from
Minas Gerais, and the album Os Tribalistas (EMI/Phonomotor 2002), a collaborative project with
Marisa Monte and
Carlinhos Brown.
His compositions have been used in the soundtrack of several films, including Blue in the Face, directed by
Wayne Wang and
Paul Auster; Bicho de Sete Cabeças, directed by Lais Bodanzki; Dois Perdidos Numa Noite Suja, adapted from a novel by
Plínio Marcos and directed by José Joffily; and Benjamim, adapted from a novel by
Chico Buarque and directed by Monique Gardenberg.
His album RSTUVXZ was ranked as the 16th best Brazilian album of 2018 by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone magazine.[6]
In 2020, humoristic group
Porta dos Fundos released a new version of "A Marcha do Demo" by
Vestidos de Espaço (supergroup of which Antunes was a part of) with Antunes on vocals in order to promote their Christmas special Teocracia em Vertigem. The version received a video in which Antunes is seen singing in studio and the Porta dos Fundos members are seen singing under
social distancing.
Making-of footage is also shown.[7]
Personal life
From 1980 to 1987, he was married to Go. Right after they broke up, he married Zaba Moreau, with whom he had four children:[1] Rosa, born in 1988, Celeste, born in 1991, Brás, born in 1997, and Tomé, born in 2001.