Most die-hard Brazilian music fans would argue that <i>Getz/Gilberto</i>, the iconic 1964 album featuring "The Girl from Ipanema," is not the best bossa nova record. Yet we''ve all heard "The Girl from Ipanema" as background music in a thousand anodyne settings, from cocktail parties to telephone hold music. So how did <i>Getz/Gilberto </i>become <i>the</i> Brazilian album known around the world, crossing generational and demographic divides? Bryan McCann traces the history and making of <i>Getz/Gilberto </i>as a musical collaboration between leading figure of bossa nova Jo¿Gilberto and Philadelphia-born and New York-raised cool jazz artist Stan Getz. McCann also reveals the contributions of the less-understood participants (Astrud Gilberto''s unrehearsed, English-language vocals; Creed Taylor''s immaculate production; Olga Albizu''s arresting, abstract-expressionist cover art) to show how a perfect balance of talents led to not just a great album, but a global pop sensation. And he ex