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Who is Gilberto Gil? Gilberto Passos Gil Moreira is a Brazilian singer, guitarist, and songwriter who was born on 26 June 1942 in Salvador, Brazil

 He is the son of a doctor and a teacher and has been married three times and has seven children

 He is considered to be a pioneer of world music

Follow the Olympic Games opening ceremony with Rio2016

com Gilberto Gil in 2013 (Wikimedia) Gil's musical style incorporates an wide range of influences, including rock and folk music, and Brazilian genres including samba, African music, reggae, salsa, and bossa nova

From 2003 to 2008, he served as Brazil's Minister of Culture in the administration of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva

  Gilberto Gil’s early years Gil started to play playing the accordion as a young boy and learned to play and sing the bossa nova in the 1950s after learning to play guitar and spending the early 1960s composing songs for TV ads

He was a key figure in the Música popular brasileira and tropicália movements of the 1960s, alongside artists such as long-time collaborator Caetano Veloso and in 1965, he moved to São Paulo

 After singing and playing in various shows there, he had his first hit when singer Elis Regina recorded his song 'Louvaao'

    Gilberto Gil was jailed then exiled from Brazil A military junta took over Brazil in 1964 and saw Gil’s musical fusion of bossa nova, samba and other styles as subversive

As a result, in 1969 he and Veloso were imprisoned for nine months before they were forced to leave the country

  The song in the opening video of the Olympic Ceremony is ‘Aquele Abraço’ by Gil, sung by composer Luiz Melodia

Composed and released that year it is considered to be Gil’s “song of farewell” before being exiled to London

It is his most played song and is seen as a symbol of the struggle against military dictatorship in Brazil

Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil After working with groups like Pink Floyd, Yes, and the Incredible String Band he returned to Brazil in 1972 to continue his musical career

 He became very popular with Brazilians involved in the Tropicalia movement, which opened up native Brazilian folk music to other kinds of influences

Gilberto Gil the politician In the late '70s, Gil became a prominent spokesman for the black consciousness movement then taking place in Brazil

In 1980, Gil teamed up with reggae artist Jimmy Cliff for a tour of  Brazil

Gil's cover of Bob Marley's 'No Woman, No Cry' reached number one, selling 700,000 copies

  Gil is perhaps the first cabinet minister of one of the world's leading economic powers to sport dreadlocks (Wikimedia) The early '90s saw Gil continuing his involvement in social and political causes in his native country, finding widespread support for his political stances, and he was elected to office in the port city of Salvador (aka the Black Rome), his hometown

  From 2003 to 2008, Gil began serving as Brazil's Minister of Culture

 He took an office in the modernist federal capital of Brasilia, and went to work championing Brazilian culture at home and abroad