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XLV Festival Internacional del Cante de las Minas
Fernando de la Morena
El Torta
Capullo de Jerez
Diego Carrasco
Tomasito

Sunday, August 7th, 2005. La Unión (Murcia)

All the information

Text & photos : Estela Zatania

Rafael Manjavacas -director de DeFlamenco.com- recibe el premio Periodismo

The parallel activities of the Festival Internacional del Cante de las Minas got under way at the Museo Minero at eight in the evening with the conference “Saura fotógrafo, eclosión de una artista proteico”, offered by Hans Meinke, director of the Círculo de Arte.

The distinction “Carburo de Oro” was presented as well as the cultural awards which were as follows:

Investigation: "Una Historia del Flamenco" by José Manuel Gamboa
Journalism: the webpage "Deflamenco.com"
Poetry: Revista Litoral nº 238: ”La Poesía del Flamenco"
Photography: the book "Flamenco" with photographs by Carlos Saura.
Educational: Oscar Herrero for guitar-teaching books

Immediately following, at the market cum theater cum cathedral of cante, we were witness to the five ages of man. Of flamenco man from Jerez. From the P word (purity) to a futurist world which for some has already arrived, and for others should never have arrived, it was possible to contemplate the evolution of flamenco. One member of the audience who left around the middle of the show commented “tonight marks a before and after in the history of this festival”, and each reader may interpret those words as he or she pleases, but it was a widespread sentiment which is bound to cause a reordering of priorities within the organization. Part of the problem was the changing bill of artists: two main performers, Nano de Jerez and el Chocolate had to be substituted, the latter due to his sudden and very sad passing last month, which was not commented throughout the performance. The evening of August 7th that profound, seering lament was deeply missed at La Unión.

Capullo de Jerez
El Torta de Jerez

A thousand people became Jerez natives for a day

Fernando de la Morena

The first age: Fernando de la Morena. Basic, honest, dignified, lacking all superficiality even in his delightful bulerías, no matter how contradictory that may sound. Fernando has one of the most lovely flamenco voices of the current scene, and one of the few that sounds the same speaking or singing. With an audience more fond of mining cante, the singer managed to win them over with his sedate and sincere soleá, fandangos with his personal touch, “a bold little move” which was taranto in the style of Jerez, siguiriyas and his much-requested bulerías. With the atmosphere duly heated-up, a thousand people became Jerez natives for a day, and on to the next level...

The second age: El Torta. Irregular and unpredictable, with a touch of madness he barely keeps under control, it’s possible this singer is the most admired outside Jerez as he is the object of a discreet personality cult. Nervous and unfocused this night, he nevertheless manages an admirable performance with his soleá, siguiriyas, taranto (everyone who comes to La Unión seems to feel obliged to sing a taranto, but it’s not necessarily a good idea), and bulerías. The audience begs for a curtain call, but the singer hastens off stage.

The third age: Capullo de Jerez. A glimpse of the future, but it’s the here and now. An instinctive and original performer whose charisma knows no limits. It makes no difference if it’s always the same repertoire because el Capullo always manages to surprise somehow. Behind the Jerry Lewis grimaces and outlandish behaviour is a flamenco singer and an artist. Compás is his plaything and he shows us how much he enjoys it with soleá por bulería, tangos, bulería and “fandangos from 153 years ago”. He works the audience with all the expertise of a seasoned Las Vegas showman, but it’s just the wrapping of a singer who invented this personality for himself and the people love it.

The five ages of flamenco man from Jerez...

The fourth age: The spaceship is about to boldly go to unchartered territory with course unknown. Diego Carrasco, all-round performer and fusioner in the best sense of the hackneyed word. He’s found a personal way of understanding flamenco, knowing just how far he can take it without losing the essence because he comes from the most authentic sort of background and frolics in the compás, that all-important element, and has a nearly infallible artistic sensibility. La Unión’s conservative audience “forgives” the posing, the little dances and other pranks and Diego surprises us in the end calling up dancer Carmen Ledesma to take part in the fiesta finale.

The fifth age: Tomasito. We land in brave new world where compás continues to play a part but has been transformed into a nearly unrecognizable being: pointing to the musicians the singer-dancer explains “it’s not me, it’s them, I do flamenco”. Another less fortunate comment has the effect of emptying many seats. Tomasito invites the “purists” to leave and proceeds to offer his “punk soleá...those dudes who wear a crest” and other personal creations sprinkled with bursts of dance, all theoretically valid flamenco-wise, but ill-suited to this venerable festival.

Diego Carrasco
Tomasito

Five manifestations of flamenco from Jerez, a varied buffet where each member of the audience had to select his favorite dish, and it’s highly unlikely anyone liked it all. The return trip was courtesy of singer Jaraqueño and guitarist Alfredo Lagos at the patio of the Maquinista de Levante.

 

 

 

Fernando de la Morena
'Jerez de la Morena'

El Torta
'Luna mora'

Capullo de Jerez
'Este soy yo'

Diego Carrasco
'Mi ADN Flamenco'

Tomasito
'Cositas de la realidad'

More information:

 

 
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