One of
Gilberto's less impressive '60s Verve outings, primarily due to the more pop-oriented song selection. Much of this is just standard pleasant
Gilberto: offhand vocals and a sumptuous Brazil pop-cum-U.S. orchestration feel (
Ron Carter and
Toots Thielemans are among the sidemen). And some of the pop choices work well, particularly
Tim Hardin's gorgeous "Misty Roses." No vocals or arrangements, however, could save the criminally wrong-headed military march of "A Banda (Parade)," or the exasperatingly coochie-coochie duet between
Gilberto and her six-year-old son on
the Lovin' Spoonful's "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice." Which makes it all the more surprising when the next and concluding track, "Nao Bate O Corocao," has
Gilberto cutting loose with confident, sassy scats, as she rarely did before or since. The CD reissue improves matters by adding five bonus cuts from A Certain Smile a Certain Sadness, recorded in 1966 in more authentically bossa nova-style arrangements, anchored by organist
Walter Wanderley. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi