BIO
Guilherme Monteiro
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Born in Rio de Janeiro in the early seventies, while Brazil was still living in a dark period of it's military dictatorship, guitarist Guilherme Monteiro had an early fascination for music and improvisation. At the early age of 7 he went after his neighbor's music teacher so he could start lessons. By the age of fifteen he was performing in jazz clubs and teaching privately in the city of Belo Horizonte, soon becoming one of the most prominent musicians in town. As a teenager in Belo Horizonte Guilherme cut his teeth on the complex harmonies and rhythms of the music from Minas Gerais, playing with Toninho Horta and Tavinho Moura.
In 1995 he relocated to the US and worked R'n'B dives and Jazz clubs in Minneapolis and Boston (where he attended Berklee) until 1999, when he was accepted to the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Performance, a highly selective program that accepts only eight students of each instrument after auditioning musicians from all over the world. At the Institute he studied privately with Clark Terry and Jimmy Heath, also performing and teaching clinics with these legends.
Living in New York City since 2000 Guilherme had a typical NY rough start but soon was playing and recording with some of the most respected musicians in town, such as Ron Carter, with whom he recorded an album for Blue Note: Jazz & Bossa and toured around the world along Mr. Carter’s long time collaborator, Stephen Scott. Other notable artists he recorded with on those early days were Kenny Werner, Grady Tate, Harry Allen, Slide Hampton, Claudio Roditi, Bernard Purdie and Johnny Alf to mention a few. On September 2007 Guilherme and Lionel Loueke performed in a duo setting at the 3rd International Guitar Festival in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Throughout the years he has been living in New York, Guilherme has lent his distinctive sound to help shape the music of a vast array of artists. He is featured on Kurt Elling’s release, “Night Moves” alongside Christian Mc Bride and Bob Mintzer; Eliane Elias’ record “Dreamer”, with Mark Johnson and Michael Brecker and Luciana Souza’s acclaimed release, “Duos II”, which won her a nomination for the Grammy of best Jazz vocalist of 2004. Guilherme was also one of the special guest soloists alongside Paquito De Rivera on Arturo O’Farril’s Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra’s album: “Two Acres and a Burro”, which was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album in 2011. He also held the guitar chair on Anat Cohen’s Anzic Orchestra and on Duduka Da Fonseca’s Quintet. As a member of Lila Downs’ band, he toured for four years and recorded three albums. The first one (One Blood) won a Latin Grammy for best Folk album.
Guilherme is a core member of the band Forro in the Dark, with whom he is helping to redefine Brazilian music for this century. With Forro, he had the opportunity to collaborate with special guests David Byrne, Miho Hatori and Bebel Gilberto on the band’s 1st album, Bonfires of Sao Joao. FITD has been touring the world on it’s own and with bands like Gogol Bordello since 2007. Besides that he also leads his own band (his first record, entitled "Air", came out in 2009 on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records).
Known for his versatility, he recorded bass on Jesse Harris’ release “Through The Night” and guitar on Jesse’s album "Sub Rosa", which was recorded in Rio de Janeiro. From 20013 through 2019 Guilherme divided his time between NY and Brasil where he worked with singer and national treasure, Gal Costa, with whom he played in theaters around the world, besides recording two studio albums and a live one. Most recently he played in Anthony Wilson’s Seasons Guitar Quartet with peers Steve Cardenas and Adam Rogers and wrote the original soundtrack for the movie “Toxic Amazon”, which is gathering very good responses throughout the international media. Publications like the Huffigton Post and CNN.com have praised the movie even before it hit the festival circuit.