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7th February 2012
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“Mis cuerdas”
Gualberto


Friday, October 1st, 2004. 9:00pm. Teatro Lope de Vega, Seville

 

Program XIII Bienal de Arte Flamenco Seville

Daily coverage BIENAL DE FLAMENCO sponsored by:
 
Text: Kiko Valle

Mis Cuerdas

The Bienal chills out. Gualberto came to the Lope de Vega and created an ambience of charming intimacy with the taste of Triana and other groups. But respect, tradition, the avant-garde, experimentalism are all present in his strings. With the years under his belt he no longer cares if people wonder whether or not it’s flamenco. It may never have concerned him at all. He has fun with the guitar pick, digging his fingers into the neck of his instrument, twisting his legs and taking off his shoes so as not to damage the sitar. It’s almost a ritual. India, the gypsies, his neighborhood…it all fills his mind with feelings that provoke mixed emotions but always with the taste of Zurraque and of “cloves and cinnamon”.

The repertoire scarcely lasts an hour. Who needs more? He has no intention of boring anyone, so much the better. Those shows, nearly always of low quality, that lack the resources to raise gooseflesh and leave you feeling washed out are unbearable. The pen is prepared to be more sincere than ever. But Gualberto invites us into his “house” and gives everything he’s got, nothing is withheld, with the serenity of someone who has nothing to lose and plenty to say.

“Levante”, inspired in the cante cartageneras is one of his whistle-stops. He deconstructs the traditional song until it becomes unrecognizable although some hints remain. He toys with siguiriyas in “Recuerdos” and Triana can be proud of having given us this man because he is yet another champion of the flamenco cause, in his own way of course – we won’t be comparing him to the old Triana singer Arenero whom he honors in one of the pieces. For Hungarian gypsies there’s “Zíngaro”. “The rhythm of this work is somewhere between swing and flamenco tangos” he explains, and the scale employed is that of the central European gypsies. This is followed by an orchestration with violoncello, piano, percussion and flamenco guitar, all answering Gualberto’s riffs who, by his own confession, has “as much fun as a barrel of monkeys”. The program finishes with “Compadres” which includes “a free-form introduction similar to the slow passages of east Indian music which he develops like an Indian raga with bulerías ending in Phrygian mode” according to the program which was not closely followed. Several unrehearsed curtain-calls were the prize. And this was where the audience could enjoy an even more flamenco Gualberto who played soleá de Triana, tangos and bulerías.

This flamenco rock musician from Seville managed to fill the theater and people knew what they were in for, it was a very select group. Gualberto strutted around the stage playing electric guitar, took off his shoes and caressed his sitar. His falsetas echo the melodies of his neighborhood, those ones we all know and love, if I may be allowed to generalize. He has a great rapport with his musicians and lets it show in each performance, he plays with musical give-and-take and although he doesn’t dominate any of the instruments, he has his virtues: more than enough sensitivity and originality that he has nothing to answer for if he doesn’t show up in many programs of flamenco fusion. Flamenco isn’t the private reserve of a chosen few for people like Gualberto who knows how to bring it all together with great respect both for tradition and the avant-garde in an art rich in musical manifestations.

Ricardo Miño & Gualberto
'Contrastes'

 


 
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