Carlos Vives | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Carlos Alberto Vives Restrepo |
Born | Santa Marta, Colombia | 7 August 1961
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1978–present |
Labels | |
Website | carlosvives |
Carlos Alberto Vives Restrepo (born 7 August 1961) is a Colombian singer, songwriter and actor. He is known for his interpretation of traditional music styles of Colombia such as vallenato, cumbia, champeta, bambuco and porro as well as genres such as Latin pop, rock, reggaeton, dance-pop and tropical music.
Having sold over 20 million records worldwide, [1] Vives is one of the best-selling Latin music artists of all time. He is regarded as one of the most influential artists in the world as he has progressively helped vallenato gain popularity globally by combining traditional vallenato music with pop/rock music, forming a subgenre that has come to be known as "vallenato-pop".
In 2019, Vives was selected as #45 on both the Greatest of All Time Latin Artists [2] and Top Latin Artists 2010s. [3] by Billboard.
In 2024, the Latin Grammys honored Vives as Person of the Year during their annual ceremony for his contributions to the music of Latin America and community philanthropic endeavors both in Colombia and the wider Spanish speaking world.
His hits include "Matilde Lina", "La Hamaca Grande", "La Gota Fría", "Alicia Adorada" (all four of which are covers of classic vallenato songs), "Pa' Mayte", "La Tierra del Olvido", "Tu Amor Eterno", "Fruta Fresca", "Déjame Entrar", "Luna Nueva", "Carito", "Papadio", "Como Tú", "Décimas Del Parecido" (a tribute to Guillermo Martínez, a Cuban-born radio host who resides in Mayagüez, and for whose program Vives was an occasional master control technician), "Volví a Nacer", "Robarte un Beso", (a collaborative effort with fellow Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra), "La Bicicleta" (a collaboration with Shakira) and "Canción Bonita" (collaborative effort with Ricky Martin).
Vives is also a successful actor. His roles as the titular character in the soap opera Gallito Ramírez and as Rafael Escalona in Escalona, a story about the famous Colombian composer of the same name, are among his most important and well-remembered appearances.
He has collaborated with multiple Colombian and international artists, including Silvestre Dangond, Juanes, Ricky Martin, Carín León, Camilo, Shakira, Maluma, Wisin, Daddy Yankee, Alejandro Sanz, Rozalén, Manuel Turizo, Ryan Castro, Sebastián Yatra, Mau y Ricky, Michel Teló, Gente de Zona, Thalía, Pedro Capó,Lalo Ebratt, Los Ángeles Azules, Fito Páez, Carlos Rivera, Play-N-Skillz, Mike Bahía, Nacho and Diego Torres.
In addition to his artistic endeavors, Vives is involved in various social and philanthropic activities. He has used his platform to support causes related to education, culture, and social development in Colombia. His foundation, Tras la Perla, focuses on improving the quality of life in his hometown of Santa Marta by promoting sustainable development and cultural initiatives.
Carlos Vives was born on 7 August 1961 [4] in Santa Marta, Magdalena, Colombia, where he spent his first 12 years of life. At that age, he and his family moved to Bogotá in search of a better life. He enrolled at Jorge Tadeo Lozano University and holds a degree in Advertising from the university. In Bogotá, he also acquired a taste for rock, getting involved in the local music scene, and started playing in bars and cafés around the city.[ citation needed ]
In 1982, Vives began acting in a number of shows and telenovelas including Pequeños Gigantes ("Little Giants" – 1983) and Tuyo es Mi Corazón ("Yours Is My Heart" – 1985). He finally found fame in 1986 by playing the title role of Gallito Ramírez, which told the story of a Colombian Caribbean coast boxer who falls in love with an uptight girl, who was portrayed by his first wife, Margarita Rosa de Francisco. That same year, he released his first album, Por Fuera y Por Dentro. The album, primarily made of ballads, failed to gain any success. In 1987, he released his second ballad album, No Podrás Escapar de Mí. Though the title track reached No. 30 on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks, the album did not sell well. His next album, Al Centro de la Ciudad, would become his last album to feature synthesizer-romantic ballads. Some of the songs got some attention being featured in telenovelas, but the album, just as its predecessors, failed to gain success.[ citation needed ]
In 1989, he was offered an acting job in Puerto Rico, and upon moving, he took a break in his music career. He is remembered for his leading roles in the soaps La Otra and Aventurera. [4] He married Herlinda Gómez, [4] his second wife (they have since divorced). Vives would spend his time between Colombia, Miami and the city of Mayagüez, Herlinda's hometown, during his marriage to her.[ citation needed ]
Upon his return to Colombia in 1991, he was offered a TV role that would change his life forever. He was cast in the leading role of a fantasy series based on the life of vallenato composer Rafael Escalona unsurprisingly titled Escalona. [4] He sang the composer's songs in the series, and that's when he retooled his career towards vallenato, [5] gaining national success with the release of the Telenovela's two soundtrack albums, Escalona: Un Canto a la Vida and Escalona: Vol. 2 .
In 1993, backed by the band "La Provincia", Vives released the album Clásicos de la Provincia in which he started fusing vallenato with rock, [4] pop and other Caribbean Colombian ethnic rhythms. This fusion scandalized vallenato purists. Clásicos de la Provincia, won the Billboard Latin Music Awards Best Album, introducing vallenato to both Colombia and the rest of the world.[ citation needed ]
The follow-up album, La Tierra del Olvido would mark a further step in Vives' desire to fusion rock, funk and pop music with traditional Colombian genres. The album gave Vives classic hits such as the title track, and the up-tempo opening track Pa' Mayte .
His subsequent releases, Tengo Fé (1997), El Amor de Mi Tierra (1999), Déjame Entrar (2001) and El Rock de Mi Pueblo (2004), were all commercially successful and were well received by critics. In 2002 Carlos Vives' album "Déjame Entrar" won him his first Grammy award for Best Traditional Tropical Latin Album.[ citation needed ]
In 2009 he released the album Clásicos de la Provincia II , which was sold exclusively in Colombian supermarket chain "Almacenes Éxito." The album saw Vives' return to covering vallenato songs in his own style.[ citation needed ]
With more than 40 songs written in 2012, Corazon Profundo was released in April 2013 and featured 11 tracks. The first single, "Volví a Nacer", was released in September 2012 and went straight to No. 1 on Billboard.[ clarification needed ] The second single, "Como Le Gusta a Tu Cuerpo" featuring Michel Teló was released in late January 2013. Carlos appeared with fellow artists Ricardo Montaner, Fanny Lu, and Andrés Cepeda as one of the coaches for the first season of the vocal competition series phenomenon The Voice Colombia, which premiered October 2012 via Colombian TV network Caracol TV.[ citation needed ]
On 27 May 2016, "La Bicicleta" with fellow Colombian singer Shakira was released as a single. The video for the song was filmed in Colombia in each of their home cities. [6] The song debuted at the number one spot on Billboard's US Latin Airplay chart and number four on the US Hot Latin Songs chart.
On 13 September 2018, Telemundo announced Carlos Vives as the fourth coach of La Voz (U.S.). [7] Vives joined Luis Fonsi, Alejandra Guzman and Wisin as coaches on the Spanish-language version of NBC singing-competition The Voice . [8]
In 2020, he joined Diego Torres, Lali, Coti, Ángela Torres, Thalía, Camila's Mario Domm, Sin Bandera's Leonel García, Reik's Jesús Navarro, Río Roma, Carlos Rivera, Camilo, Fonseca, Manuel Turizo, Jorge Villamizar, Pedro Capó, Farruko, Kany García and Rauw Alejandro, Ivete Sangalo, Dilsinho, Rubén Blades, Gente de Zona, Mau y Ricky, El Cigala, Dani Martín, Leslie Grace, Nicky Jam, Ara Malikian and Prince Royce for 'Color Esperanza 2020', a version of Diego Torres' Color Esperanza.
In April 2021, Vives joined Ricky Martin for "Canción Bonita", a song which was critically acclaimed for its fusion of musical styles from Colombia and Puerto Rico. The song was nominated for Song of the Year and Best Pop Song at the 2021 Latin Grammy Awards.
In November 2021, he was a featured artist in the Disney movie 'Encanto' singing the credits song 'Colombia, Mi Encanto' written by Lin-Manuel Miranda. [9]
In 2023, Vives appeared in the Disney+ show 'The Low Tone Club' and sang the theme 'Tumbando Muros' and two other songs for the show. In addition, Vives wrote all songs included on the show's soundtrack.
In 2024, the Latin Grammys recognized Vives as Person of the Year at their annual ceremony for his significant contributions to Latin American music and his philanthropic efforts in Colombia and the broader Spanish-speaking community.
Vives was married to the Colombian actress Margarita Rosa de Francisco in a relationship that was closely followed by the national media. Puerto Rican Herlinda Gómez was his second wife, with whom he had two children: Carlos Enrique Vives and Lucía Vives. [10] He is now married to former Miss Colombia Claudia Elena Vásquez and they have two children: [4] Elena Vives, and Pedro Vives. He divides his time between Miami and Colombia, mainly Santa Marta and Bogotá. [4]
Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Latin Pop Songs Artist of the Year, Solo | Himself | Nominated |
Hot Latin Song of the Year | "La Bicicleta" (feat Shakira) | Nominated | |
Vocal Event | Nominated | ||
Airplay Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
Digital Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
Latin Pop Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
2018 | Tropical Album of the Year | Vives | Nominated |
2019 | Tropical Song of the Year | "Hoy Tengo Tiempo (Pinta Sensual)" | Nominated |
Tropical Artist of the Year | Himself | Nominated | |
2020 | Hall of Fame | Inducted | |
2021 | Tropical Artist of the Year | Nominated | |
Vives has won two awards out of seven Grammy Award nominations.
Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Best Traditional Tropical Latin Performance | El Amor de Mi Tierra | Nominated |
2002 | Best Traditional Tropical Latin Album | Déjame Entrar | Won |
2005 | Best Latin Pop Album | El Rock de Mi Pueblo | Nominated |
2014 | Best Tropical Latin Album | Corazón Profundo | Nominated |
2015 | Best Tropical Latin Album | Más + Corazón Profundo | Won |
2019 | Best Latin Pop Album | Vives | Nominated |
2023 | Best Tropical Latin Album | Cumbiana II | Nominated |
2024 | Best Tropical Latin Album | Escalona Nunca Se Había Grabado Así | Nominated |
A Latin Grammy Award is awarded by the Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences. Carlos Vives has won 18 and received 47 nominations throughout his career. In addition to his competitive wins, he was recognized as Person of the Year at the 25th edition of the awards.
Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Album of the Year | El Amor de Mi Tierra | Nominated |
Best Traditional Tropical Album | Nominated | ||
Record Of the Year | "Fruta Fresca" | Nominated | |
Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Song | Nominated | ||
2002 | Album of the Year | Déjame Entrar | Nominated |
Best Contemporary Tropical Album | Won | ||
Record of the Year | "Déjame Entrar" | Nominated | |
Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Song | Won | ||
Best Short Form Music Video | Nominated | ||
2005 | Best Contemporary Tropical Album | El Rock de Mi Pueblo | Won |
Best Tropical Song | "Como Tú" | Nominated | |
2009 | Best Latin Children's Album | Pombo Musical (Varios Artistas) | Won |
2013 | Album of the Year | Corazón Profundo | Nominated |
Best Tropical Fusion Album | Won | ||
Record of the Year | "Volví a Nacer" | Nominated | |
Song of the Year | Won | ||
Best Tropical Song | Won | ||
2014 | Album of the Year | Más Corazón Profundo | Nominated |
Best Contemporary Tropical Album | Won | ||
"Record of the Year" | "El Mar de Sus Ojos" | Nominated | |
"Cuando Nos Volvamos a Encontrar" | Nominated | ||
Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Song | Won | ||
2016 | Record of the Year | "La Bicicleta" (with Shakira) | Won |
Song of the Year | Won | ||
2018 | Song of the Year | "Robarte un Beso" | Nominated |
Best Contemporary Tropical Album | Vives | Won | |
2019 | Best Long Form Music Video | Déjame Quererte | Nominated [11] |
2020 | Album of the Year | Cumbiana | Nominated |
Best Contemporary Tropical Album | Won | ||
Song of the Year | "For Sale" (with Alejandro Sanz) | Nominated | |
Best Tropical Song | "Canción para Rubén" (with Rubén Blades) | Won | |
"Búscame" (with Kany García) | Nominated | ||
Best Long Form Music Video | El Mundo Perdido de Cumbiana | Nominated | |
2021 [12] | Song of the Year | "Canción Bonita" (with Ricky Martin) | Nominated |
Best Pop Song | Nominated | ||
2022 [13] | Song of the Year | "Baloncito Viejo" (with Camilo) | Nominated |
Record of the Year | Nominated | ||
Best Pop Song | Nominated | ||
Best Pop/Rock Song | "Babel" (with Fito Páez) | Won | |
Best Contemporary Tropical Album | Cumbiana II | Won | |
Best Tropical Song | "El Parrandero (Masters en Parranda)" (with Sin Ánimo De Lucro, JBot & Tuti) | Nominated | |
2023 | Album of the Year | Escalona Nunca Se Había Grabado Así | Nominated |
Best Cumbia/Vallenato Album | Escalona Nunca Se Había Grabado Así | Won |
A Premio Nuestra Tierra is an accolade that recognize outstanding achievement in the Colombian music industry. Carlos Vives has received 8 awards from 24 nominations. [14]
Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2014 | Best Song of the Year | "La Foto de los Dos" | Won |
Best Music Video | Won | ||
Best Mainstream Song | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Pop Performance of the Year | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Pop Performance of the Year | "Bailar Contigo" | Nominated | |
"Como Le Gusta a Tu Cuerpo" | Nominated | ||
Corazón Profundo | Best Album of the Year | Won | |
Best Tropical Pop Artist of the Year | Himself | Won | |
Best Mainstream Artist | Nominated | ||
Best Artist of the Year | Won | ||
Tweeter of the Year | Nominated | ||
2020 | Best Tropical Artist | Nominated | |
Audicence Favorite Artist | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical Song | "Hasta Viejitos" (with Alejandro González) | Nominated | |
Best Folk Song | "Déjame Quererte" (with Cholo Valderrama, Cynthia Montaño, Elkin Robinson, Kombilesa Mi y Velo de Oza) | Won | |
2021 | Audicence Favorite Artist | Himself | Nominated |
Best Folk Artist | Won | ||
Colombian Artist in the World | Nominated | ||
Album of the Year | Cumbiana | Nominated | |
Song of the Year | "Cumbiana" | Nominated | |
Best Folk Song | Won | ||
Audience Favorite Song | Nominated | ||
Best Tropical / Salsa / Cumbia Song | |||
"Canción para Rubén" (with Rubén Blades) | Nominated | ||
Best Pop Song | "For Sale" (with Alejandro Sanz) | Nominated | |
Best Video | "Cumbiana" | ||
The World Music Awards is an international awards show founded in 1989 that annually honors recording artists based on worldwide sales figures provided by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI).
Year | Category | Nominated work | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2013 | World's Best Album | Corazón Profundo | Nominated |
World's Best Male Artists | Carlos Vives | Nominated | |
World's Best Live Act | Nominated | ||
Vallenato is a popular folk music genre from Colombia. It primarily comes from its Caribbean region. Vallenato literally means "born in the valley". The valley influencing this name is located between the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and the Serranía de Perijá in north-east Colombia. The name also applies to the people from the city where this genre originated: Valledupar. In 2006, vallenato and cumbia were added as a category in the Latin Grammy Awards. Colombia's traditional vallenato music is Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding, according to UNESCO.
Juan Fernando Fonseca Carrera is a Colombian singer. Born in Bogotá, he chose music at an early age, studying music formally at institutions such as Javeriana University in Bogotá and Berklee College of Music in Boston. Fonseca's self-titled debut gained him considerable attention in Colombia. His second album released Corazón (2005) explored the crossroads where pop/rock influences meet vallenato, bullerengue, and tambora. Gratitud followed in 2008, with Ilusión arriving in 2011.
Clásicos de la Provincia is the sixth album by Colombian singer-songwriter Carlos Vives. Released in Colombia in late 1993, and internationally on February 22, 1994, the album is a collection of Colombian vallenato classics. The album made Vives a superstar in Colombia and was his breakthrough in the vallenato genre.
La Tierra del Olvido is the seventh album by Colombian singer/composer Carlos Vives. The album was released on July 25, 1995, and contained a split of vallenato covers, as well as Vives' first foray into original compositions in the vallenato style. The album was nominated for a Lo Nuestro Award for Tropical/Salsa Album of the Year. The album consolidated Vives as Colombia's most famous musician at the time of its release.
Déjame Entrar is the tenth studio album recorded by Colombian singer-songwriter Carlos Vives, It was released on November 6, 2001. It won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Tropical Latin Album at the 44th Annual Grammy Awards on February 27, 2002.
Al Centro de la Ciudad is the third album released by Colombian singer/composer Carlos Vives, released on June 6, 1989.
No Podrás Escapar de Mí is the second album released by Colombian singer/composer Carlos Vives. It was released in 1987, Vives was best known as the star of soap operas at the time of its release. The album contains romantic ballads and Rock music sung in Spanish. Vives embraced Vallenato later in his career. Although the title track reached number 30 in the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks, the album was largely ignored by the public, and is a collector's item for fans.
"La gota fría" is a 1938 Colombian vallenato song, composed by Emiliano Zuleta. It has been proposed as an unofficial Colombian anthem. The song emerged from a musical controversy with Lorenzo Morales. Many artists had covered the song include Carlos Vives, Grupo Niche, Ray Conniff, Gran Pachanga, Los Joao, La Sonora Dinamita, Julio Iglesias, Tulio Zuloaga, and Alfredo Gutiérrez. The title of the song alludes metaphorically to the weather phenomenon, in which a cold front clashes with warm air, producing heavy storms and torrential rains; the cold drop is occasionally apparent near the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta.
Silvestre Francisco Dangond Corrales is a Colombian singer. He attributes his talents to his father, the singer William José "El Palomo" Dangond Baquero, who during the mid-1970s recorded 10 singles with Andrés "El Turco" Gil; and his mother, who comes from a musical family and passed down her charismatic nature to him, while also playing a major role in his formal and personal education.
The 3rd Annual Latin Grammy Awards were held in Los Angeles at the Kodak Theatre on Wednesday, September 18, 2002. Alejandro Sanz was the night's big winner, winning a total of three awards including Album of the Year. The ceremony returned in style after the 2001 ceremony was cancelled because of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks across America.
Bernardo Ossa is a Colombian composer, musician, sound engineer, Record Label manager and 4 time Grammy Award producer. He was born in Cali, Colombia.
Tropipop is a music genre that developed in Colombia in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It is a blend of traditional musical forms of the Caribbean Region of Colombia, mainly vallenato, with foreign Latin genres such as salsa and merengue, and pop and pop rock. The term "tropipop" comes from the synthesis of the words "tropical" and "pop music" describing the genre's mix of Latin tropical roots with American popular music.
"Fruta Fresca" is a vallenato song written and performed by Colombian recording artist Carlos Vives and produced by Emilio Estefan and Juan Vicente Zambrano as the lead single from his studio album El Amor de Mi Tierra (1999). The song incorporates the sound of Latin pop and Colombian vallenato music. In the song, he compares his lover's kisses to fresh fruit. The track was well received by critics who praised the production of the record. "Fruta Fresca" became Vives' first number-one hit on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart. It is recognized as one of his signature songs.
"Déjame Entrar" is a song released by Colombian recording artist Carlos Vives as the first single from his fifth major studio album of the same title in 2001.
"Volví a Nacer" is a song written and performed by Colombian recording artist Carlos Vives and co-produced by Andrés Castro. Following an international hiatus, it was released as the lead single from his thirteenth studio album Corazón Profundo (2013) on September 24, 2012. The song's lyrics are in Spanish and were inspired by the events of his music career as well as his wife Claudia Elena Vásquez. It is described by Vives as a romantic song with elements of Colombian vallenato and pop music.
The discography of Carlos Vives, a Colombian musician, consists of thirteen studio albums, thirty singles and music videos.
Paula Arenas Álvarez is a Colombian pop singer-songwriter.
"La Tierra del Olvido" is a song by Colombian singer Carlos Vives from his seventh studio album of the same name (1995). The song was written by Iván Benavides and Vives, who handled production alongside Richard Blair. It was released as the lead single from the album in 1995. The song is a neo-vallenato number that utilizes the folk guitar and accordion, on which Vives longs for his homeland. The song received positive reactions from three music critics, being found as one of the album's catchiest tunes by them. It was a recipient at the ASCAP Latin Awards in 1996.
"Alicia Adorada" is a Colombian song written and performed by Juancho Polo Valencia.
Cumbiana is the sixteenth studio album by Colombian singer Carlos Vives, released on May 22, 2020, through Sony Music Latin. It was produced by Carlos Vives, Andrés Leal and Martin Velilla, and features collaborations with Jessie Reyez, Alejandro Sanz, Ziggy Marley, Elkin Robinson and Rubén Blades.