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Born in Algeciras in 1947, Francisco Sánchez Gómez,
Paco de Lucía, built a brilliant career spanning nearly one
half century, and definitively revolutionized flamenco guitar playing.
With no fear of error, nor of bristling partisan sensibilities,
you could sum up the modern history of flamenco guitar with the
neat quartet: Montoya – Ricardo – Sabicas – Paco.
Beyond any doubt there have been other maestros, but revolutionaries,
these four.
For the very youngest ‘tocaores’, who now prefer to
be called ‘guitarists’, Paco de Lucía represents
the prehistory of flamenco guitar – an old master to be duly
honored, but whose playing style has lost some relevance. But those
of us of a certain age recall how that boy with the innocent face
burst upon the scene, shook up the existing structure and showed
us a new path using only two instruments: his guitar and his genius.
As Paco himself commented not long ago, “The evolution of
flamenco is in a guitar and a voice. Just because you stick in an
accordion, flute or percussion doesn’t make something ‘modern’.
It’s like trying to make a silk purse from a sow’s ear.
The essence is what matters. Evolution comes from within the instrument
itself, the nuances.” No one is better qualified to pronounce
those important words.
He showed us a new path using only two
instruments: his guitar and his genius.
Pepe de la Isla, Mario Escudero, Pedro Cortés, Rafael
el Negro, Paco de Lucía
In 1965 another guitar maestro, Mario Escudero (Alicante, 1928),
recounted an anecdote which at the time seemed of little importance
because it merely told of another child prodigy among many. But
in retrospect the scene he described is a moment frozen in the history
of flamenco when a boy pulled the rug out from under the establishment’s
feet and was anointed heir apparent before anyone knew what had
happened.
In 1963 Los Chiquitos de Algeciras, Paco and his older brother
Pepe, were signed up by dancer José Greco shortly after their
triumph at the Concurso Internacional de Flamenco de Jerez, and
found themselves in Los Angeles. Paquito, who was fifteen at the
time, was third guitarist in the group, with Ricardo Modrego and
Manolo Barón. It was the boy’s first time out of Spain,
and guitarists Mario Escudero, Juan Serrano and Julio de los Reyes,
along with Triana singer Pepe Segundo, went to the hotel where the
group was staying. Mario describes the scene like this: “Barón
asked us if we’d seen the kid play. We told him we’d
only seen him in the show, but hadn’t noticed anything out
of the ordinary. He then took us up to Paco’s room where the
somewhat chubby, shy boy in short pants was stretched out on the
bed reading comics. Barón said ‘Hey Paquito, play a
little something for these friends of mine', and Paco obediently,
timidly, picked up the guitar and asked ‘What should I play?’
‘A little bulerías, son’ answered Barón”.
Mario goes on to explain that when that music began to sound, Pepe
Segundo, the singer, laughed nervously, but the three guitarists
were visibly shaken and could only manage a muffled “shit.......shit”.
De
los Reyes tells a story which took place several years later. Along
with guitarists Pedro Cortés Sr., Emilio Prados and Sabicas’
brother Diego Castellón and Málaga singer Paco Ortiz,
they took Paco, now a young man of twenty-something, to Sabicas’
apartment. Paco was extremely respectful and paid careful attention
to everything the old veteran said. Sabicas handed him the guitar
and asked him to play. The young man pulled off his customarily
astonishing music and after about a half hour, passed the guitar
back to Sabicas asking him to play. As he placed the guitar in position,
the maestro apologized saying he hadn’t played or even practiced
in days, and to the astonishment of those present, his left hand
trembled like a leaf in the wind. Paco Ortiz corroborates that moment
and adds: “it was incredible to see that monster of a guitarist
tremble before the boy! It makes you realize the magnitude of Paco’s
ability, already at that age, the maturity and aplomb, the overwhelming
technique”. Nevertheless, Paco de Lucía had heard Sabicas
at least a decade earlier when his records made it to Spain. Paco’s
biographer, Juan José Téllez, recorded the following
statement of Paco’s: “With Sabicas I discovered a clean
sound I’d never before heard, a technical level previously
unknown to me, and beyond any doubt, a different way of playing”.
“The records are there, concerts
only last
until the first breeze carries them away...”
With a thriving career underway, his name becoming a household word
in Spain and new horizons being explored with his buddy Camarón,
Paco had to play for Antonio Mairena on the spur of the moment at
the Festival de Cante de las Minas de La Unión. When the
autumn of flamenco’s most prestigious singer of the era came
face to face with the young guitarist’s early spring, the
changing of the generational guard was nearly completed. Playing
por soleá and por bulería, taking care to give a Melchor
de Marchena sound (Mairena’s regular accompanist) so as to
make the singer feel at ease, the young man expertly and exquisitely
coddled, supported and enhanced the classic cante leaving all those
present, including Mairena himself, profoundly impressed.
The rest is history like they say. Shortly after La Unión
we were surprised to see Paco de Lucía on the news sitting
on stage having a ball with foreign musicians whose names we couldn’t
pronounce. “What is this?! What do these guys know about compás?”
But this Chiquito de Algeciras followed his particular path making
great music for mainstream audiences and becoming a global superstar.
Now
as we anxiously await the release of his latest recording, “Cositas
buenas”, Paco has announced that the tour of America and Canada
he is about to embark on in January and February, 2004 is to be
the last: “The records are there...concerts only last until
the first breeze carries them away”.
“My God, who doesn’t sound like Paco? It’s
impossible.
He’s followed so many paths, encompassed so much...he’s
the boss, the God of guitar” - Tomatito
Estela Zatania
More information:

Paco
de Lucía will not repeat sextet formula in upcoming USA tour
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