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Recordar (To Remember) is the thirteenth studio album by Portuguese American singer/songwriter Jorge Ferreira, released in 1991 on Henda Records & Videos in America, Ovação Nacional in Portugal and Ruiz Sr. Import C.A. in Venezuela. All songs were written and composed by Ferreira.
[edit] Track listing
# |
Title |
Lyrics/Music |
Time |
01 |
"Portugal Não Dorme No Verão" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:43 |
02 |
"Não Deixei De Ser Quem Era" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:33 |
03 |
"Amor Constante" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:32 |
04 |
"O Meu Primeiro Amor" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:19 |
05 |
"Recordar" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:51 |
06 |
"O Camião" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
2:23 |
07 |
"Há Muito Que Te Quero" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:22 |
08 |
"Mundo Frágil" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
4:05 |
09 |
"Estou Louco Por Ti" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:31 |
10 |
"Sonhei Contigo" |
Jorge Ferreira/Jorge Ferreira |
3:26 |
[edit] Album credits
[edit] Personnel
- Jorge Ferreira - lead vocals, background vocals, keyboards, xylophone.
- Maria Nunes - background vocals.
- José Xavier - accordion.
- Bob O'Donnell - harmonica.
- José Pereira - trumpet, clarinet.
- José Bettencourt - drums, percussion.
- José Ernesto Barros - acoustic guitar, electric guitar.
- Paulo Sousa - tenor guitar, nylon guitar.
- Mario Brum - bass guitar.
- Isidro Silva - trombone, maracas.
- José Soares - saxophone, flute, tambourine.
[edit] Production
- Musical arrangements, direction, producer, sound engineer, mixing: Jorge Ferreira.
- Mastering: Bob Patten.
- Recording studio: City Limit Track (Westport, Massachusetts, U.S.A.).
[edit] Design
- Design: Costa & Valério (Agualva-Cacém, Lisbon, Portugal).
- Photography: Novart Studio (Fall River, Massachusetts, U.S.A.).
[edit] Trivia
- In the Ovação version, the album title is Não Deixei De Ser Quem Era[1]. The cover is completely different.
- The song "Não Deixei De Ser Quem Era" is also performed by Portuguese band Diapasão[2].
- The song "Mundo Frágil" is about the gulf war.
[edit] References
[edit] External links