For Monte, Rio is not just her home, it shows up constantly throughout her music. One of Monte\'s most touching songs on 2000\'s \"Memories, Chronicles, and Declarations of Love,\" is \"Gentileza\". \"The song is about a homeless prophet of the people named Gentileza,\" she explains. \"The word means kindness (in Portuguese). Gentileza was a homeless man spent his entire life, 40 years walking the streets of Rio simply preaching kindness, painting graffiti throughout the city with messages like \'kindness generates kindness, violence generates violence\'\". Monte first met Gentileza when she was a teenager. \"Everyone in Rio knew him (before he died 2 years ago). Because he spent his whole life on the streets, he had a huge white beard and dressed in prophet\'s clothes. He almost looked like Moses with the tablets, handing out flowers and proverbs,\" she remembers fondly. \"In one neighborhood here in Rio, he painted 40 highway support beams with his message of kindness. I remember passing through this neighborhood with Carlinhos Brown, and told him that I wanted to show him something beautiful. Incredibly, when we got there, Gentileza\'s paintings were gone, replaced with a fresh coat of gray paint. I couldn\'t believe it. How can someone erase the work of an artist that is preaching kindness in such a violent place?\" The incident inspired the song. It also helped launch a movement, a non-governmental organization called \"Rio com Gentileza\" (Rio with Kindness) that is working to restore all of Gentileza\'s artwork throughout the city.
Another one of Monte\'s passions is the rhythm that defines Rio, the samba. In a country with well over 100 distinct musical genres, the samba is perhaps Brazil\'s best known, and most captivating and infectious. For \"Memories\", she once again included a song from her favorite samba composer, Paulinho da Viola. Just as Da Viola\'s \"Dança de Solidão\" was the most touching song on 1994\'s \"Rose and Charcoal\" his heartfelt love song \"Para Ver As Meninas\" is one of the highlights from Monte\'s new album.
Monte also teamed up with Paulinho da Viola when she traded hats and worked as producer for Velha Guarda Da Portela (The Old Guard of Portela). The group is made up of elderly sambistas from one of Rio\'s leading samba schools, Portela. \"I love working with the old masters,\" Monte explains enthusiastically. \"They have so much respect for the art, respect for principle, ethics, and education.\" For this project, \"Tudo Azul\", Monte and Velha Guarda did a massive amount of research, finding songs that have never been recorded, material from the 1940\'s, 50\'s, and 60\'s. \"It is living history, and until now, only alive through oral history,\" she adds. The album was nominated for a Latin Grammy Award for Best Samba Album of 2000. ">
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