HOME - Deflamenco.com   search
17th May 2012
map shopping cart help

 

16th FESTIVAL DE NIMES

“Inés Bacán, Israel Galván”
Teatro de Nimes, France. January 25th, 2006. 8:30pm

PROGRAM - Special XVI Festival de Nimes.

Text: Estela Zatania

Even the names rhyme. And they have many other things in common as well despite being from diametrically opposed worlds: a middle-aged non-professional singer from the dynasty of the Peña Pinini who intreprets cantes she’s been hearing all her life with no sort of intellectualization, and a young dancer from Seville, more creative than avant-garde, highly professional from early on and who has perfected his art by means of a process that is clearly cerebral. But they are of the same species of rara avis flamenca which provokes extreme reactions, everything except indifference.

The mystic goddess transmits voices the rest of us cannot perceive

Inés Bacán with Antonio Moya accompanying, “cante with guitar” as the younger generation calls it to distinguish the absence of other instruments or voices. The singer readies herself with closed eyes moving into a sort of trance, gently swaying back and forth in her seat. Instead of doing ‘palmas’ her right hand waves gently about in the air as if directing an invisible orchestra somewhere in her mind. Moya reads her body language and adjusts his accompaniment with a perfection that can only come from years of artistic collaboration and friendship with Pedro Bacán, the singer’s brother who passed away prematurely nine years ago and who was and continues to be this guitarist’s mentor. The communication is perfect although the audience doesn’t quite know how to react to the singer’s eery mass por tientos. The alegrías of Pinini sound more like moist earth than sea spray and are neither “alegre” nor frivolous. The soleá is pure Utrera and Lebrija done at a clip with classic styles of La Moreno of soleá por bulería, as well as styles of Juaniquí and Serneta in addition to some personal creations although in actual fact, everything this lady does could be classified as a “personal creation”. The nearly total absence of vibrato in her voice, combined with a strange and subtle dissonance creates a sensation of painful solemnity that is not to the liking of all flamenco fans but which for some is the key to the profound quality Bacán’s voice transmits. Moya gives structure and incorporates a Diego del Gastor sound which is quite apt for this particular singer. Nanas, romances in the style of the Peña family and siguiriyas, the mystic goddess transmits voices the rest of us cannot perceive, bulerías to close and an encore of tonás. Amen.

Both are of the same species of rara avis flamenca that provokes extreme reactions

Israel Galván. Another free spirit hard to pin a label on. Unique in the most literal sense of the word. An inquisitive genius on stage, timid in person. With his work “Edad de Oro” the dancer seems to have hit upon a balance between the classic and the experimental with the occasional bizarre touch he has us accustomed to in everything he does. However at no point do you have the feeling he yearns to be different at all costs. In fact it’s quite the contrary, you watch his dancing and it’s clear these are purely classical movements carried just a bit further, charicatured at times, humor is just beneath the surface in this hermetic work that some reviewers have called “perfect”. Rondeña, soleá, malagueñas, siguiriya danced without cante and you hardly notice, tientos and tangos, surprising alegrías, as fresh as if being danced for the first time... But the forms are irrelevant, everything is “galvanerías” and the audience gets the message loud and clear. I’m jotting down impressions in my notebook without taking my eyes off Israel, some of the dances don’t even last one minute and every second is taken advantage of, not even the roller coaster at Port Adventure provides higher emotion.


Israel Galván, Terremoto, Alfredo Lagos (photo: Estela Zatania)

Israel Galván is one of the dancers who best dominates the rhythm or ‘compás’, that prerequisite for anyone wishing to swim in the great flamenco pool, and his entire body becomes rhythm to such an extent that one never notices the absence of percussion, voice or guitar in those moments on his own. The technical command...footwork, turns, placement...is impeccable and no one can accuse this dancer of wanting to create without first learning the foundations. And create he does, just as Carmen Amaya, Antonio Ruiz, Gades, Mario Maya or that other enfant terrible Vicente Escudero did in their respective days.

Taking it apart and putting it back together, creating a style and showing us the way to the future on a new evolutionary path in flamenco dance

The communication with Fernando Terremoto and Alfredo Lagos is total and both the singer and the guitarist shine splendidly via guitar and singing solos that trigger constant bursts of oles. The bulerías fiesta finale is a far cry from the typical insipid exercise we are all too often subjected too. Israel pulls off the mother of all bulerías bits, you wouldn’t expect anything less from this man, and putting the final icing on the cake, sings for Lagos with Terremoto’s accompaniment.

It’s quite posible the line of dance so masterfully perfected by the Farruco family who perform at the Nimes theater on Saturday and Sunday to close out the festival cannot be taken any further. So here we have Israel Galván who like a little boy with a new toy taking it apart and putting it back together, is creating a style and showing us the way to the future on a new evolutionary path in flamenco dance.


Related CDs:

Inés Bacán
'Pasión'

Inés Bacán - Soledad sonora

El Lebrijano e Inés Bacán - Puro y Jondo. DVD.

 

 
Store in Madrid
c/ Moratín, 6
28014 Madrid
+34 912987045
Contact - Advertising - Subscribe
deflamenco en tu email
pago seguro. Tienda on-line flamenco
 
© 2003 Tintes Flamencos S. L. Todos los derechos reservados - CIF - B83546655.
Included in the Official Registry of mail-order businesses (NEVA) 2003/0337/13/28/4/V