Artist

Manfredo Fest

Genre: International ,Brazilian ,Global Jazz ,Fusion
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1962 - 1997
Listen on Coda
Among Brazil's early bossa nova figures, Manfredo Fest remained one of the lesser-recognized names until his visibility surged sharply during the 1990s. Born legally blind, he drew his primary initial inspiration from George Shearing yet forged a distinct path separate from both Shearing and fellow Brazilian jazz pianists, sending forth ceaseless cascades of bop-inflected lines over a Brazilian rhythmic foundation while occasionally revealing traces of his classical training.

His father, who had emigrated from Germany, worked as a concert pianist and led the music department at the University of Porto Alegre. Following this background, Fest pursued classical piano studies during his youth and mastered Braille notation for reading scores, though his preferences shifted toward jazz and samba once he completed his degree at the University of Rio Grande do Sul. He belonged to the circle of Brazilian players who shaped the bossa nova style in the late 1950s, resulting in several trio sessions in that style between 1961 and 1966. After relocating to Minneapolis in 1967, he proceeded to Los Angeles, where he functioned as keyboardist and arranger with Bossa Rio while also joining Sergio Mendes on tour. By 1973 he had established himself in Chicago, performing locally as well as across the Playboy Club circuit, before making Palm Harbor, FL, his home in 1988. Following releases on various independent imprints, he secured wider recognition in the United States after joining Concord Picante in the early 1990s, issuing a run of vibrant small-group recordings that merged Brazilian flavor with bop foundations. He passed away on October 8, 1999, at age 63 while awaiting a liver transplant.