Four-time Latin GRAMMY® winner and GRAMMY® winner Roberto Carlos was feted as the 2015 Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year at the South Pacific Ballroom of the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas, Wednesday night.
The sold out event (the 1300 attendees was a new record for the gala) gathered top talent such as Alejandro Sanz (who interpreted "Lady Laura"), Romeo Santos ("Un Gato En La Oscuridad"), Dionne Warwick ("Honestly"/Falando Serio"), Jesse & Joy ("La Montaña") and Paula Fernandes and Camila ("Propuesta").
It speaks to the success, power and permanence of Roberto Carlos's music that it took just a few bars of any of his songs to make the audience, full of usually hard-to-please music industry people, to gasp in recognition, nod or mouth the lyrics along. Optimism, positive messages and melodies with an engaging, childlike innocence can go a long way and in Roberto Carlos' case, it has made his music the soundtrack for various generations.
The theme was, of course, love and some of the performances stayed close to the original versions. But Leslie Grace and Maluma gave "Jesus Cristo" a powerful, gospel tinge while Julieta Venegas and Carlos Vives offered a very personal, earthy interpretation of "El Progreso," Roberto Carlos's passionate cry for protection of nature, against arms trafficking and change, aspiring to be "as civilized as the animals are." Likewise, Victor Manuelle turned "El Desahogo" into an irresistible salsa song (with a teasing, James Bond-theme like arrangement) with a very clever, engaging soneo (improvised singing) included, culminating with Victor Manuelle, still singing, walking down from the stage and embracing with Roberto Carlos. It earned the first standing ovation of the evening.
Gabriel Abaroa Jr., President /CEO of The Latin Recording Academy noted that "every year we say 'How are we going to go beyond this?' And every year it gets better. But how could it not get better with Roberto Carlos?"
And with that, Abaroa brought to the stage Laura Tesoriero, Chair of the Board of Trustees of The Latin Recording Academy and Neil Portnow, President/CEO of The Recording Academy® to present Roberto Carlos the Person of the Year award.
After thanking The Latin Academy and "the marvelous artists who were here singing my songs, it is something very special," Roberto Carlos named them all, one by one. "This is a very special moment in my life. I'll never forget this day. Thank you."
After a pause, Roberto Carlos came back to close the evening, first interpreting "Emociones," his big band style summing up of a life, his own "My Way." "If I cried or I laughed, the important thing is I felt emotions." And he segued it, almost inevitably, with "Un Millon De Amigos," his positive, upbeat anthem about wanting to have a million friends ("I want a choir of little birds/ I want to take this friendly song/ to whoever might need it/ I want to have a million friends/ and this way sing stronger.")
On Wednesday night, it felt as if he already has them.
Roberto Carlos became part of an impressive list of past recipients that includes Miguel Bosé, Plácido Domingo, Gloria Estefan, Vicente Fernández, Juan Luis Guerra, Carlos Santana, Joan Manuel Serrat, Shakira, and Caetano Veloso.