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Nelly Kim Furtado (born December
2, 1978) is a Canadian singer, songwriter, record producer, and
instrumentalist, who also holds Portuguese citizenship.
Furtado came to fame in 2000 with the
release of her debut album Whoa, Nelly!, which featured her
breakthrough Grammy Award-winning single "I'm like a Bird". After
becoming a mother and releasing the less commercially successful
Folklore (2003), she returned to prominence in 2006 with the release
of Loose and its hit singles "Promiscuous", "Maneater", "Say It
Right", and "All Good Things (Come to an End)".
Furtado is known for experimenting with different instruments,
sounds, genres, languages, and vocal styles. This diversity has been
influenced by her wide-ranging musical taste and her interest in
different cultures.
Nelly
Furtado was named after Soviet Korean gymnast Nellie Kim.
Raised in a Roman Catholic home, Furtado
first sang at the age of four when she performed a duet with her
mother at a church on Portugal Day. Although remaining unclear about
her religious beliefs, she still affirms a belief in God, the Ten
Commandments, and in avoiding the Seven Sins. She began playing
instruments at the age of nine, learning the trombone, ukulele and,
in later years, the guitar and keyboards. At the age of twelve, she
began writing songs, and as a teenager, she performed in a
Portuguese marching band. Furtado has
acknowledged her family as the source of her strong work ethic; she
spent eight summers working as a chambermaid with her mother, who
was a housekeeper in Victoria. She has stated that coming from a
working class background has shaped her identity in a positive
way.
The first musicians Furtado interacted
with were underground rappers and DJs. During a visit to Toronto the
summer after eleventh grade, Furtado met
Tallis Newkirk, member of the hip hop group Plains of Fascination.
She contributed vocals to their 1996 album, Join the Ranks, on the
track "Waitin' 4 the Streets". After graduating from Mount Douglas
Secondary School in 1996, she moved to Toronto. The following year,
she formed Nelstar, a trip hop duo with Newkirk. Ultimately, Furtado felt the trip-hop style of the duo was
"too segregated" and believed it did not represent her personality
or allow her to showcase her vocal ability. She left the group and
planned to move back home.
Before moving, however, she performed at the 1997 Honey Jam, an
"all-female urban" talent show. Her performance attracted the
attention of The Philosopher Kings singer Gerald Eaton (aka Jarvis
Church), who then approached her to write with him. He and fellow
Kings member Brian West helped Furtado
produce a demo. She left Toronto, but returned again to record more
material with Eaton and West. The material recorded during these
sessions led to her 1999 record deal with DreamWorks Records. Furtado's first single, "Party's Just Begun
(Again)", was released that year on the Brokedown Palace: Music from
the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack.
Personal life
On September 20, 2003 in Toronto, Furtado gave birth to a daughter, Nevis, whose
father is DJ Jasper Gahunia. Furtado and
Gahunia, who had been good friends for several years, remained
together for four years until their breakup in 2005. Furtado told Blender magazine that they continue
to be good friends and jointly share responsibility of raising
Nevis.
In June 2006, in an interview with Genre magazine, when asked if
she had "ever felt an attraction to women", Furtado replied "Absolutely. Women are beautiful
and sexy." Some considered this an announcement of bisexuality, but
in August 2006, she confirmed that she was "straight, but very
open-minded". In November 2006, Furtado
revealed that she once turned down US$500,000 to pose unclothed in
Playboy.
In July 2007, it was reported that Furtado is engaged to Cuban sound engineer,
Demacio "Demo" Castellon, who worked with her on Loose.
Influences
During her teenage years, Furtado
embraced many musical genres, listening heavily to mainstream
R&B, hip hop, alternative hip hop, drum and bass, trip hop,
world music (including Portuguese fado, Brazilian bossa nova, and
Indian music), and a variety of others. Her influences have included
Jeff Buckley, Janet Jackson, Oasis, Caetano Veloso, Esthero, Amalia
Rodrigues, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Cornershop, TLC, Mary J. Blige,
Mariah Carey, Digable Planets, De La Soul, Radiohead, Madonna, The
Smashing Pumpkins, The Verve, U2, Enya, and Beck.
Furtado's music has also been influenced
by her current residence, Toronto, which she calls "the most
multicultural city in the entire world" and a place where she "can
be any culture". Regarding Toronto's cultural diversity, she has
said that she did not have to wait for the Internet revolution to
learn about world music; she began listening to it at the age of
five and continues to discover new genres.
I always know there's a new genre left to discover.
For me, it's like a metaphor for life. I feel like if you can get
down with any style of music, you can get down with any style of
person. So it's fun for me-I get to expose my fans to different
vibes and they, in turn, open their minds too. I'm always
undergoing mind-opening.
Acting career
Furtado began acting in school plays in
middle school. She appeared on the episode "Some Buried Bones" of
CSI: NY as Ava Brandt, a master-thief and victim of domestic abuse.
She also guest starred on an episode of the day time soap opera One
Life to Live, on which she performed some of her songs in a local
club with Saukrates. Furtado participated
in the hit Portuguese soap opera Floribella.
She had stated in an interviews on planete rap, a French radio
station, that she has taken up acting classes when she is in Toronto
and also had working on a movie which has been prosponed.
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