Saulo Roston

Saulo Roston
Birth name Saulo do Amaral Oliveira Souza
Born (1989-03-22) March 22, 1989
Origin São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Genres Pop, R&B, Soul
Occupation(s) Singer, Songwriter
Years active 2009–present
Labels Warner Music Brasil
Website SauloRoston.com

Saulo do Amaral Freire Oliveira Souza (born March 22, 1989), best known as Saulo Roston, is a Brazilian pop singer and songwriter. He rose to fame after winning the fourth season of the reality television show Ídolos Brazil.[1]

Biography

Saulo was born in 1989 in Presidente Epitácio, São Paulo. He began singing at age 12, and at 13, did a concert for 4000 people. With the constant support of parents, Roston did a few months of singing lesson in São Paulo. He studied guitar and also a bit of piano.[2]

At age 15, he moved to Goiânia, Goiás and kept singing in bars. At 17, he moved to Malaysia to do an exchange program with his local Rotary club. After a rough year, he returned to Brazil in early 2007, where he spent some downtime in his home city. Saulo had huge ambitions and decided to try out for Ídolos Brazil third season, however was eliminated in the Top 30. Saulo did not give up, returned to the show and ranked prominently in the fourth season, beginning his unpredictable rise to stardom.[2]

Ídolos Brazil

Overview

Roston first auditioned for the third season of Ídolos Brazil when he made all the way to the Top 30, but was cut prior to the Top 10. A year later, he auditioned again, this time for the fourth season. Both his auditions took place in São Paulo, São Paulo.

Performances

Week # Theme Song Choice Original Artist Order # Result
Audition Auditioner's Choice "Bem Que Se Quis" Marisa Monte N/A Advanced
Theater First Solo N/A N/A N/A Advanced
Top 24 Top 12 Men "Como Vai Você" Roberto Carlos 7 Advanced
Top 12 Sing Your Idol "Beija Eu" Marisa Monte 4 Safe
Top 11 70s Night "Mania de Você" Rita Lee 10 Safe
Top 10 The Roguish "Já Tive Mulheres" Martinho da Vila 6 Safe
Top 9 Broken Heart Songs "Tem Que Ser Você" Victor & Léo 4 Bottom 3
Top 7 80s Night "Você é Linda" Caetano Veloso 2 Safe
Top 6 Cult Trash "Aguenta Coração" José Augusto 1 Safe
Top 5 Kings of the Pop "Amor I Love You" Marisa Monte 4 Safe
"Your Song" Elton John 9
Top 4 Dedicate A Song "Monalisa" Jorge Vercilo 1 Safe
My Soundtrack "Eu Sei Que Vou Te Amar" Tom Jobim 5
Top 3 Judge's Choice "Pro Dia Nascer Feliz" Cazuza 1 Safe
"Fácil" Jota Quest 4
"O Portão" Roberto Carlos 7
Top 2 Winner's Single #1 "Nova Paixão" Saulo Roston 1 Winner
Best of the Season "Your Song" Elton John 3
Winner's Single #2 "Entre o Ontem e o Amanhã" Saulo Roston 5

Career

Roston signed a recording contract with Warner Music Brasil, managed by Rede Record in December 2009.[3]

Nova Paixão

Studio recording sessions for the eponymous major label debut Saulo Roston ran in São Paulo, São Paulo, early 2010. Saulo Roston: Nova Paixão was released on March 25, 2010 in Brazil, with the song "Nova Paixão" (English: New Passion) as first single.[4][5][6]

Music Video

The music video was directed by actor Alexandre Frota. Filming started on March 12, 2010 on Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro. All the action takes place in a futuristic flat, mounted in the Rede Record's studios. Actress Karen Junqueira play the role of Saulo's love interrese.[7] The video premiered first on March 25, 2010.[4]

Preceded by
Pensando em Você
Ídolos winner's singles
Nova Paixão (2009)
Succeeded by
Sem Juízo

Discography

References

  1. "Saulo Roston é o vencedor do "Ídolos" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2009-12-17.
  2. 1 2 "Redesenhando: Saulo Roston" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  3. "Saulo Roston vence a final do programa "Ídolos", da Record" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2009-12-17.
  4. 1 2 "Saulo Roston lança CD e clipe com festa em São Paulo" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  5. "Saulo Roston lança CD com festa em SP" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  6. "Saulo Roston, vencedor do "Ídolos 2009", lança seu primeiro CD nesta quarta (24)" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  7. "SSaulo Roston grava o primeiro clipe de sua carreira" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2010-03-12.
Preceded by
Rafael Barreto
Ídolos Brazil winner
2009
Succeeded by
Israel Lucero
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