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4th February 2012
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Festival de Arte Flamenco
Mont-de-Marsan

Farruquito "Alma vieja""

Espace François Mitterand, Friday, July 4th, 2003. 9 :00 p.m.

Interview: FARRUQUITO: patriarch of a dynasty

Dance: Farruquito, Farruco, Barullo, El Polito, Pilar 'La Faraona', Adela Campallo, Keren Jacobi.
Cante: José Valencia, El Canastero, Mari Vizárraga, La Tana.
Gutar: Román Vicenti, El Perla.
Guest artist: Manuel Molina.

 

The night of July 4th, 2003 two thousand five hundred human beings occupied their numerically assigned niches to behold the most awaited show of the Mont-de-Marsan festival. After an extraordinarily successful tour of the United States, he who was prince had become king, and sitting in the Espace François Mitterand there was a certain sense that we were about to witness a coronation. The front rows were full of well-known flamenco performers who had stayed on so as not to miss this recital by flamenco's first family of dance. Nowadays when flamenco is deeply into superstars, the grandson of the legendary dancer Farruco is the new man of the hour, a status the young patriarch is reluctant to accept, at the same time that he assumes his responsibilities with all the dignity of someone much older.

It is impossible to remain indifferent in the face
of the avalanche of energy and artistic expression

To speak about this show is to speak of a dynasty and a school of dance characterized by imposing elegance and astonishing flamenco power. It is impossible to remain indifferent in the face of the avalanche of energy and artistic expression which is launched from the stage to each and every spectator and which fills the entire ambience with that undefineable quality we all struggle to define, which is 'flamenco'.

 

"Alma vieja" is based precisely on the historical pretext of the family. The show begins with guest artist Manuel Molina (of the duo 'Lole and Manuel') seated center stage alone with his guitar and an austere overheard spot as he narrates the ascendance and birth of Farruquito as if he were describing a Norse god. Only Manuel Molina would be capable of carrying out such a histrionic chore without looking ridiculous, and the applause indicated he pulled it off.

A constant ebb and flow of enery, with compás always the indesctructible framework

 

 

 

From this moment on, a series of dances is served up reiterating the generational motif. Farruquito dances with his aunt La Faraona, he passes the 'torch' to his younger brother Farruco who in turn passes it to Barullo and Polito, younger still, and back again to the elders in a constant ebb and flow of energy, w¡th compás always the indestructible framework. In time the whole idea could eventually become trite and oversentimental, but for now it's nice to see this danced family portrait, fully justified too because each of the components is a full-fledged artist in his or her own right, down to the very youngest…no cute kids here wiggling around to milk applause.

There is a welcome effort to enlarge the usual repertoire of flamenco dances where everything tends to end up being bulerías. In a traditional farruca with cante included, danced by Farruquito wearing a flashy red silk suit with black pompoms, they try to play up the name of the dance, but despite the best efforts of the magnificent singer José Valencia with a cante that has little to offer, it doesn't come together. There is more staging and choreography than in earlier shows and with the exception of the closing 'fin de fiesta', one misses the anarchic, inspired dancing of Farruquito.

Farruco, Farruquito's younger brother, pure testosterone
in compás, at times appears on the verge of self-destruct

In "Bulerías de la Gorda" ['fat lady's bulerias'] the voluminous Faraona provides a generous dose of 'the essence'. Farruco, Farruquito's younger brother, pure testosterone in compás, at times appears on the verge of self-destruct, but he always manages to stop on a dime at just the right instant, driving the crowd wild and stealing the show from his older brother. "Soleá en tres décadas" with Barullo, Farruco and Farruquito returns to the family motif, and the way they have of throwing their torsos back, defying the very laws of nature, makes two thousand five hundred respiratory systems momentarily stop working. "Oooh, I'm falling!!" is the humorous cheer from someone in the cuadro.

Two thousand five hundred respiratory systems momentarily stop working.

When the first part ends, the audience is so excited, those who have failed to study the program sufficiently think the show is over. What could they possibly do to top what we just saw? After the intermission two women in white batas de cola for cantiñas add a nice visual touch, but it feels like a commercial concession. In Farruco's taranto with a short bit for la Faraona, the young man wears a glitzy mustard-colored suit that seems inappropriate, but the dancing is superb. Following this, Farruquito comes out wearing an all-white Nehru suit for siguiriyas, a number that ends spectacularly with the two female dancers and four men raising hell to the sound of the dramatic Manuel Molina cambio, the other Manuel Molina that is, the one who deserved to be called "Señor". Lole's Manuel Molina returns to center-stage to recite a sort of epilogue and the floodgates are opened for bulerías with each member doing his or her bit. Happily exhausted we leave the large auditorium to find a large gathering of young teenage girls awaiting the appearance of the young patriarch.

 

 

 

Photos: Top: Manuel Molina, botton: Farruco


Text & Photos:
Estela Zatania
zata@deflamenco.com

 
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