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morao...old falseta and new haircut
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Ricardo
Posts: 14222
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

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RE: morao...old falseta and new haircut (in reply to kitarist)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: kitarist quote:
ORIGINAL: Ricardo quote:
Oleee! Hey is there any chance he's been listening to Myrddin?? I've never heard that opening falseta before Uh, NO chance. That is a very old falseta of Javier Molina. Diego del gastor plays a slow clear version on youtube somewhere, and on norman's site he has an analysis of it I think under siguiriyas falsetas or pulgar falsetas I can't remember now. Fascinating. Besides this one, how many of Javier Molina's falsetas are preserved today (i.e. with reasonably proven lineage) and where can we hear them? The belief is Manuel Morao, Rafael Aguila, and their students preserve the style of Javier Molina (Jerez style). The students would be Manuel Parrilla, Paco Cepero, Moraito, Gerardo Nuñez, etc. I was surprised when I noticed Diego del Gastor using it, so it is hard to say who might retain the most authentic versions of the Molina’s falsetas….My guess would be Manuel Morao.
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CD's and transcriptions available here: www.ricardomarlow.com
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Apr. 1 2022 12:01:58
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kitarist
Posts: 1665
Joined: Dec. 4 2012

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RE: morao...old falseta and new haircut (in reply to Ricardo)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Ricardo quote:
ORIGINAL: kitarist quote:
ORIGINAL: Ricardo quote:
Oleee! Hey is there any chance he's been listening to Myrddin?? I've never heard that opening falseta before Uh, NO chance. That is a very old falseta of Javier Molina. Diego del gastor plays a slow clear version on youtube somewhere, and on norman's site he has an analysis of it I think under siguiriyas falsetas or pulgar falsetas I can't remember now. Fascinating. Besides this one, how many of Javier Molina's falsetas are preserved today (i.e. with reasonably proven lineage) and where can we hear them? The belief is Manuel Morao, Rafael Aguila, and their students preserve the style of Javier Molina (Jerez style). The students would be Manuel Parrilla, Paco Cepero, Moraito, Gerardo Nuñez, etc. I was surprised when I noticed Diego del Gastor using it, so it is hard to say who might retain the most authentic versions of the Molina’s falsetas….My guess would be Manuel Morao. Thanks, Ricardo; it's all stuff I love, so I guess I intuitively gravitate towards the Jerez style But no one has tried yet to catalogue distinct falsetas, though; you kinda just have to know which one was passed down through generations?
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Konstantin
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Apr. 1 2022 20:05:33
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