Sara Alexandra Lima Tavares (1 February 1978 – 19 November 2023) was a Portuguese singer, composer, guitarist and percussionist. She was born and raised in Lisbon, Portugal. Second-generation Portuguese of Cape Verdean descent, she composed African-, Portuguese- and North American-influenced world music.
Early life
Tavares's parents were immigrants from Cape Verde who settled in Almada in the 1970s.[2] She was born on 1 February 1978.[3] While still a child, she was left in the care of an old woman when her father left the family and her mother moved to the south of the country with her younger siblings.[4]
Tavares showed great musical promise from a young age; in 1994 she won the national television song contest Chuva de Estrelas [pt],[5][6] performing Whitney Houston's "One Moment in Time".[6] That same year, she won the Festival da Canção, that earned Tavares a slot in the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest[4] at the age of 16. Her winning song, "Chamar a Música," was featured on her debut EP, Sara Tavares & Shout (1996), where Tavares mixed gospel and funk with her native Portuguese influences.
In 2017, eight years after Xinti [pt], Tavares released Fitxadu [pt].[8] The album was inspired in Lisbon's different African sounds and cultures and features a more electronic and urban sound than Tavares's previous works.[9] The album received a Latin Grammy nomination for Best Portuguese Language Roots Album.[10]
Artistry
Tavares composed in Portuguese and Portuguese-based creole languages. Although Portuguese was the main language of her songs, her repertoire includes multilingual songs mixing Portuguese with Portuguese Creole and even English in the same song.
Tavares named Donny Hathaway, Stevie Wonder, Tina Turner and Aretha Franklin as her favourite childhood artists.[4] Her music was noted to feature a blending of cultures,[11] particularly those of Portugal and Cape Verde.[1] Tavares was among a group of Portuguese-born artists of African origins, that helped bring African influences to mainstream music in Portugal.[12]
Personal life
In 2021, Tavares publicly revealed that she discovered she was bisexual at the age of 24.[13]
Death
Sara Tavares died on 19 November 2023 in Lisbon, at age 45, from a brain tumour with which she had been diagnosed in 2009.[3][14]
Legacy
The song Pé de choro by Huca, which is set to compete in Festival da Canção 2024, is a tribute to Tavares.