XLIII Gazpacho Andaluz |
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Cante: Canela de San Roque, Fernando de la Morena, Calixto Sánchez. Guitar: Antonio Carrión, Domingo Rubichi, Manolo Franco. Solo guitar: Paco Delgado “El Leri”. Fiesta group: Paco de Amparo, Luis Torres, Rosario Amador, “La Chiquetita”, Luis Amaya. Flamenco cuadro of Pepe Torres: cante Enrique “El Extremeño”, Moi de Morón, “El Galli”, Miguel Lavis. Guitar: Rafael Rodríguez. TRADITIONAL RECIPE FOR GAZPACHO It’s not the oldest cante festival, but one of the first, begun in 1963 when the concept of this type of event was just beginning to take shape largely thanks to the work of Antonio Mairena. And it was precisely maestro Antonio whose centennial was honored this year at the 43rd Gazpacho Andaluz of Morón de la Frontera. Guitarist Paco Delgado “El Leri” from this guitar-playing town opened with solo compositions of granaína, soleá, siguiriya and bulerías, showing the Morón influence and competing as best he could with the noisy pubs that surround the bull-ring where the festival was held. Next up was Alejandro Segovia, “Canela de San Roque”. Avid Mairena follower, in the best sense, superb connoisseur of soleá, dense and weighty siguiriyas, an aggressive dynamic delivery. This singer seeks, finds and delivers decisively each time he opens his mouth to sing, and always has the clear intention of putting all his cards on the table. After siguiriyas, he interprets some fandangos of Chato Méndez, and Antonio Carrión on the accompaniment is in especially great form. Canela closes his performance with bulerías, including some Mairena-style romances. The second part opened with Calixto Sánchez who could not be missing from a tribute to his hometown’s maestro Antonio Mairena. With the great Manolo Franco on guitar, he sang tientos tangos with classic styles and verses from contemporary poetry. His smooth clean delivery is not everyone’s cup of tea, but Morón’s flamenco fans embrace a wide spectrum of offerings without hang-ups. Intelligent siguiriyas, tasty alegrías and bulerías songs with a retro flavor left the audience enthused and appreciative. The icing on this year’s cake was a local hero whose reputation has crossed frontiers. In addition to guitar, Morón is a dance town, and Pepe Torres, of the family of Joselero, Andorrano and Diego del Gastor, has a solid reputation in the panorama of traditional dance. In his appearances with Son de la Frontera, he is wonderful, but with his own group and on his own, he’s extraordinary. The excellent team of singers included Enrique el Extremeño, Moi de Morón, David el Galli and Miguel Lavis, the latter, a young Jerez talent who deserves greater attention. And as if that were not enough, Rafael Rodríguez on guitar. Pepe Torres’ dancing draws from his upbringing in Morón, the weddings and private parties; updated polished and with just the right amount of Farruquito influence thrown in. The art of natural elegance, with a low-key approach in which the strength comes not from brute force, but from the compás. Group members take turns at bulerías and dance themselves off-stage closing out the Gazpacho Andaluz of 2009 at a quarter past four in the morning.
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