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XLV Festival Internacional del Cante de las Minas
Marina Heredia
Arcángel
María Pagés “Bazar de las Ideas”


Monday, August 8th, 2005. 10:45pm. La Unión (Murcia)

All the information

Text & photos : Estela Zatania

The fifth day of the Festival Internacional del Cante de las Minas began with an unscheduled conference offered by Manolo Curao about Carlos Saura’s film “Flamenco”. Curao highlighted the “impossible scenes”, that is to say, images that will never be repeated, captured in the full-length feature film, and the scene of Chocolate, who died just last month and was supposed to have sung this week at the festival, singing for the dancing of Farruco senior and his grand-son, a twelve-year-old Farruquito, was the definitive demonstration that made all further explanation superfluous. The scene of Manuel Moneo and Manuel Agujetas singing tonás side by side, for many people the movie’s most memorable moment, was also shown.

Three stars of the current flamenco scene, two singers and a dancer, was the menu of the day for this next-to-last show included in the schedule. Marina Heredia is the daughter of Granada flamenco singer Jaime el Parrón. The attractive young woman has a great interest in traditional cante and this causes her to stand out from others of her generation who drift off into the land of flamenco pop without having gone through basic training. In fact, Marina is cultivating a repertoire designed to tone down the pop image and emphasize her dedication to classic cante. If just a couple of years ago she was only singing light rumba and bulerías songs, she opened Monday night’s concert with an impressive assortment of a capella cante with a voice more flamenco than we’re accustomed to hearing from her. With cantiñas she brought memories of Pastora Pavón, and with soleá she was thoroughly believable although there’s a certain tendency to overly-measured compás which reduces the spontaneity. She offered her mining cante without apology to the locals, and an assortment of tangos sounding inevitably like her hometown included some purely Granada styles. Pity that the inappropriate fade-out at the end made it seem like she was mouthing to a recording. With Bolita on the guitar she ended with a bulerías song that was more song than bulerías, based on the poem “Siguiriya torera”.

The new school, which is actually the old schol, of sweet melodious delivery

Arcángel
Marina Heredia

The singer from Huelva known as Arcángel has a voice which situates him firmly in the new school, which is actually the old schol, of sweet melodious delivery and whose main representatives, aside from Arcángel himself, are Miguel Poveda and Mayte Martín. He’s a highly polished and professional singer, not mention extremely handsome, no small advantage nowadays. His sweet style is much-appreciated in these parts and by audiences in general, but his knowledge and command of classic cante are not to be disdained.

Accompanied by Miguel Ángel Cortés, he started out with the caña, recalling older forms with a “lamento”, the repeated “ay”, sung all in a piece, without taking a breath, and finishing with the classic soleá apolá “Se hundió la Babilonia” – not everyone bothers to work the caña so lovingly. A tango song – nowadays no singer dares limit him or herself to traditional cante – and once again the fade-out can’t be justified. Malagueña de Chacón with impeccable technique and a voice nothing less than fascinating for these cantes, is ended with the fandango of Frasquito Yerbabuena.

For the siguiriyas Cortés took out a digital device to tune down the sixth string, and from that point on his desire to take the spotlight became evident. Nevertheless Arcángel interpreted a splendid series of styles with personality and command. Cantiñas in E position included alegrías de Córdoba, a form currently enjoying a discreet comeback after decades of abandon, and to end the performance, needless to say, Arcángel sang his wonderful fandangos de Huelva played in A position where the young man found his perfect vocal niche. The audience offered its warmest approval and the singer ended with more fandangos away from the mike – a nearly impeccable performance no matter how you look at it.

A marathon of color and movement

María Pagés
María Pagés

After the intermission María Pagés was on with a dozen dancers and musicians not named on the program and an abbreviated version of her work “Canciones antes de una guerra” now called “El bazar de las ideas”. She kept the “boquerones” song, the opening of percussion and footwork, the men’s farruca, the Nana de la Cebolla and other odds and ends, and several of the stranger elements from the original work were passed over, for which we were very grateful. A soleá danced without cante or guitar, guajira, siguiriya to recorded music with classic voices like those of Tomás Pavón and Manuel Vallejo, more farruca, alegrías for the group with little cante and Pagés’ soleá made up a marathon of color and movement. Adhering to the concept of “the faster and louder, the better”, the work came to a smash-bang end and the audience obediently offered a standing ovation.

As on other nights, an after-show nightcap could be enjoyed at the patio of the Maquinista de Levante, on this occasion with the fine young singer from Chiclana, Antonio Reyes accompanied by Manuel Herrera on the guitar.

 

Arcángel
'La calle perdía'

Marina Heredia
'Me duele, me duele'

 

 

 

 

 

 

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