BarkellWH -> RE: Flamenco and Classical guitar duet (Sep. 6 2014 19:39:13)
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quote:
Its like somebody saying they like flamenco guitar, but don't like the horrible whaling of the singer. It's not really "Horrible whaling", they just have'nt acquired the taste, so they write it off as if it were the same as a dying cow. I agree with you up to a point. To use your example above, I did not care for cante at first. I remember long ago referring to it as sounding like a dying cat in a hail storm. But the more I listened to it the more it grew on me. I love cante now, just as I still love solo flamenco guitar (I know, that dates me for sure!). For me, cante definitely was an acquired taste, one that I thoroughly enjoy. Nevertheless, that does not translate into assuming that one does not like something simply because one has not given it a chance. One can listen to something, perhaps some new innovation, with an open mind, and in the end still not like it. As an example, I went to see Paco de Lucia when he last performed in the Washington area two or three years ago. His group included a harmonica and a bass guitar. I found it musically interesting, and I particularly liked the harmonica, but I did not like it as "flamenco." I know it was "modern" flamenco and am not quibbling over the point. It's just that I did not like it as flamenco, not because I did not give it a chance, but because the diffuse instruments in his band diluted the effect my taste in flamenco (which tends toward Sabicas and, today, Paco Pena) has on me. One can consider my taste in flamenco "traditional," "old fashioned," "narrow-minded," or any number of other adjectives, but there it is. Taste is an individual thing, and, for better or worse, that one does not care for some innovation within a genre does not necessarily indicate that one has written it off without giving it a chance. It might mean one just doesn't care for it. Bill
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