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XLV Festival Internacional del Cante de las Minas

Paco de Lucía and group

Tuesday, August 10th, 2005 11:00pm
La Unión (Murcia)

All the information

Text: Estela Zatania

Day six and counting at the forty-fifth Festival del Cante de las Minas de La Unión. At the Museo Minero, an interesting interview by journalist Miguel Mora with Carlos Saura was followed by the official tribute to the film-maker and the presentation of commemorative objects.

Tribute to Carlos Saura (Photo: Estela Zatania)

The day everyone was waiting for had arrived. The costly tickets were sold out long ago, rumors were flying about what kind of car he’d bring, the possibility of attending the sound-check, what hotel he was at, whom he came with....

When I got to the concert area, a sort of large industrial lot made into an open-air theater for the night, the two thousand people who were streaming in reminded me of the little ants that were nervously congregating around the bit of cupcake that got left on my night-table the day before. I wondered how many of these people knew what they were about to see. Celestial music played by a god? Curative, mood-enhancing or hallucinogenic sounds perhaps? What image and concept did each one have of Paco de Lucía, and how did they quantify the value of his contribution to flamenco guitar?

The weather was unstable. In the wee hours a sudden sheet of rain banged down on the dusty little town of La Unión, unheard-of this time of year, and clouds continued to threaten. I recalled in 1965 when a young boy played two pieces for 8 or 10 people in Mario Escudero’s studio in New York – an free-form piece, can’t remember what, and bulerías. From that moment on it seemed nothing was ever the same in flamenco. Four decades later an entirely new generation considers Paco de Lucía “the old school”, but it’s hard to imagine how flamenco guitar would sound today were it not for the genius, the artistic sensibility, the musicality and raw intelligence of Paco. And even so, there are those would “blame” him for everything that’s wrong with flamenco today – the more unfortunate experiments, the degeneration of cante and the unbridled commercialism – but the boy just did what he knew how to do best and can be blamed, if at all, for having done it superlatively, extraordinarily well. Nowadays when everyone’s a “maestro”, the man from Algeciras is one of the very few who truly deserves that title.

Paco de Lucía (Photo: Rafael Manjavacas)
Paco de Lucía (Photo: Rafael Manjavacas)

It’s hard to imagine how flamenco guitar would sound today were it not for the genius, the artistic sensibility, the musicality and raw intelligence of Paco

Now he comes to La Unión with truckloads of palm trees and the world is at the feet of the person who was recently awarded the prestigious Príncipe de Asturias prize, most of them not even music-lovers, much less flamenco fans. (A few drops fall, nothing serious...). He appears on stage – white shirt, black vest and trousers, guitar in hand, smile on face – you’d think he was a normal person. The rondeña is beautiful, the technique almost comparable to earlier levels, but technique is the least of what we look for in Paco – nowadays his level has been surpassed – it’s the fine taste, the musicality, the capacity for making everything sound flamenco.


La Tana, Duquende, Montse Cortés (Photo: Estela Zatania)

He receives the first applause shouting simply “gracias!”, and on come Duquende, La Tana and Montse Cortés for a dream-team chorus, with Alain Perez on bass, Antonio Serrano on keyboard and Piraña doing percussion. Voices strongly reminiscent of Camarón sing bulerías and when it’s Duquende’s turn a voice shouts out “wow, what memories!”

Unlike other contemporary flamenco guitarists, with Paco the compás is always floating on the surface, and for that alone he deserves another medal. He incorporates threads of melodies that have become part of the universal flamenco guitar repertoire, sequences of notes that have been cooking in this man’s intelligence, being transformed for decades, always recognizable, never quite the same. He modulates easily to minor key where he frolics and gives free reign to his inspiration.

All those who came afterwards have followed the path marked by Paco de Lucía, and his is the aesthetic that conforms the panorama of contemporary flamenco guitar.

On his own again for a sort of fandango fantasy, pulling notes out like little Swiss bells, and then the group returns with Niño Josele for alegrías. Paco keeps delivering his unmistakable and very flamenco phrasing. After a brief intermission, once again it’s the whole group for a long potpourri that includes snippets from Las Grecas and tangos extremeños, followed by bulerías and the singers taking turns.

Rumba…there’s a certain overload of binary rhythm and you long for a guitar solo, but we’re happy to have Paco sitting there in front of us and the good news is he’s enjoying himself, or so it seems. Duquende’s voice, sounding so like Camarón’s, continues to fascinate the audience. Paco addresses his admirers: “It’s a tremendous pleasure to be here tonight with so many flamenco fans” and the rhythm of bulerías is the backdrop for that jazzzman’s invention, solo spots for each member of the group while the maestro marks rhythm.


Piraña, Alaín Pérez, Antonio Serrano, Paco de Lucía with her dauther, Niño Josele, La Tana, Duquende, Montse Cortés (Photo: Estela Zatania)

More rumba and Montse Cortés sticks in the classic siguiriya “Reniego”. No sooner am I wondering whether the world needed that, than Duquende is also singing siguiriya por rumba. The recital comes to an end and the audience goes wild demanding a curtain call. The group returns to the stage with notes and chords that meander aimlessly until finally “Entre dos Aguas” breaks loose to great cheering and thunderous applause. The piece is thirty years old, and it’s by no means the best item in Paco de Lucía’s extensive repertoire, but it continues to sound current. And it doesn’t sound current because it’s marvellous music, but because all those who came afterwards have followed the path marked by Paco de Lucía, and his is the aesthetic that conforms the panorama of contemporary flamenco guitar.

Eva Durán with José Luis Montón (Photo: Estela Zatania)

And the rains came, finally, but they had the exquisite good taste not to mess with the maestro. An afterhours cante recital by Eva Durán with the guitar of José Luis Montón gave us the opportunity to digest everything we had seen.


 

 

 

 

 

Paco de Lucía
'Cositas buenas'

Integral de Paco de Lucía

Paco de Lucía
'Antología' 2 CD + 1 DVD

La Tana
'Tu ven a mí0

Montse Cortés
'La Rosa blanca'

 

 

 

 

 

 

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