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All the Solea
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estebanana
Posts: 9353
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
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RE: All the Solea (in reply to estebanana)
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The trend has been to make the Foro Guitar-o-Cenrtic and over a long period of time this has caused many aficionados to see the foro as guitar website. Cante' happens with or without a guitar, and the development of cante' is not really guitar driven. At least as I understand it in our current era of recorded music. Before recording the structure of cante may or may not have been influenced by guitar, but since the first recordings not so much. As far as I know, there are a few exceptions. The development of different styles of accompaniment has been traditionally a regional happening or phenomena and later accompaniment of palos has been influenced by solo playing and outside influences. Regions like Jerez, Lebrija, Moron, Sevilla, Granada, Huelva, have had associations with styles of guitar playing that work with the way cante' is sung in those regions. Madrid is more of a melting pot historically because guitarists, dancers and singers would converge on Madrid from different regions to work and record. Often were put together by producers of both performances and recordings. These artists might not other wise have met in their respective regions. Sometimes these parings of singer to guitarist for recording dates were better "marriages" than others. A good artistic marriage is the pairing of Marote' with Fernanda, who recorded together in the early 1970s, and resulted in an album that is considered a classic modern recording by many aficionados. A later example would be the pairing of Ines Bacan with Moraito, it made a very nice record, but someting that many aficinados felt was a bit forced in feeling because it matches a deep Jerez feelign in guitar and palmas with Ines Bacan who really needs a specific kind of Lebrija accompaniment to really do her thing. Far from a disaster, the album is great, but not totally satisfying in that way. After Ines' brother Pedro died, Antonio Moya stepped in and understood the Lebrija aire and recorded with that group of singers. These are just examples, and not the end of the story, but it seem like the heavy emphasis on the Foro is for guitar and I think it is time to reevaluate why we like, love, need flamenco as a whole and not just hyper focus on the guitar. The professional guitar player here have a lot to say on the other half of thier playing which is working with dancers and singers. I hope they will join the conversation, in this group they have some of the deepest knowledge of the cante' itself.
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Date Mar. 30 2016 9:18:16
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estebanana
Posts: 9353
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
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RE: All the Solea (in reply to Piwin)
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quote:
There are many different types of solea. Some refer to geographic locations, such as Solea de Triana, Solea de Lebrija, Solea de Alcala, Solea de Cordoba, etc. while others refer to a specific person who is believed to have been the originator of the specific kind of solea: Solea de Paquirri, Solea de la Serneta, Solea del Charamusco, etc. Each type of solea has its own characteristics. What makes it even more difficult to identify what kind of solea is being sung is the fact that it is quite possible for a singer to mix several styles of solea together, for instance starting with a "smooth" solea (say Solea de Alcala) and then moving on to a stronger more "valiente" solea (say Solea de Cadiz). Off to a good start. There is a lot of information in your post to parse through. I won't go into all of it because there is a lot to unravel and look at. I will ask a question and we will see what happens. I honestly don't have an answer that is perfectly clear to me, but on the idea of Solea associated with one person at the time they sang it would it be thought of as a 'Solea Personal'? I think for example Chocolate has a way of singing fandangos that seems he has a 'fandangos personal' maybe more about the delivery. There is the idea of Solea regional is there are the idea of Solea Personal? And I just realized all this might get to sounding really amateur flamencologo, so feel free to throw into passionate fist pounding, just not directed at others. I hope a wide range of questions will be asked from beginner to expert. Don't be too cool for school.
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Date Mar. 30 2016 9:51:33
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Escribano
Posts: 6415
Joined: Jul. 6 2003
From: England, living in Italy
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RE: All the Solea (in reply to estebanana)
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quote:
it seem like the heavy emphasis on the Foro is for guitar and I think it is time to reevaluate why we like, love, need flamenco as a whole and not just hyper focus on the guitar. Straying off-topic a little that might be another thread in the making, so I apologise. My explanation is that the guitar is an international instrument with a long history of (mostly) guys in their bedroom appropriating the guitar styles of other cultures e.g. jazz, gypsy, blues, cuban, brazilian bossa nova, argentinian tango, English heavy metal and flamenco etc. The guitar is physically much more accessible, especially when you are on your own, whereas flamenco has traditionally been a group activity of cante and guitar. Indeed, it is often informally just cante with some palmas and probably was so for many years before the Spanish guitar was adopted. When I was learning rock and blues guitar, joining a band opened my eyes to our individual responsibility that made me a cog in a machine e.g. one didn't often play lead guitar all over the singer. The drums and bass were a rhythm unit of their own and are not diverted from the tempo, ever. In fact, I moved from guitar to bass as I realised the power of this unit. However, when I started to learn flamenco guitar, inspired by a solo Habichuela soleá, I visited Jerez and learned the role of the guitar, up close. I have said before that a solo guitar is practically ignored in the peñas but complete silence descends when a canteor starts up with their story. In my opinion (and it is just an opinion) flamenco is the communal sharing of stories and this might make an interesting separate thread. Very few of us can sing a soleá whilst playing the guitar - unlike the blues, for example. We can't do palmas at the same time, or dance. So outside of a knowledgable group environment, mostly in Spain, it is almost impossible to take on the genuine role of the guitar in flamenco. There also the huge technical side to this. Many of use have come from other guitar backgrounds and realise that flamenco guitar is really difficult and cannot resist the challenge. I gave up a couple of years ago as I did not have the time to practise for hours a day, but I might dabble again, one day. You can browse new guitars for hours, but it's not so easy to buy a voice or a palmero. An analogy is that when I get a decent image out of a camera, by looking, watching the light and knowing how to compose. The first question I am asked is "what kind of camera did you use?" Solo guitar was really developed by PdL into mass, international entertainment. Cante is much less acceptable to an international audience. Dancing more so, in a theatrical setting. When I was pretty good at soleáres, I played a little at a party in the UK and plenty of people said that was not what they considered to be flamenco. They were expecting the Gypsy Kings but that is another discussion. So let's remember the role guitar plays in flamenco and pay homage. Keep it up.
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Date Mar. 30 2016 10:05:50
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Escribano
Posts: 6415
Joined: Jul. 6 2003
From: England, living in Italy
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RE: All the Solea (in reply to DavRom)
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quote:
to speak about the development of flamenco without talking about the influence of the guitar seems like sticking one's head in the sand for the sake of some other superfluous agenda I just see an attempt to de-emphasise solo guitar for a while. So, why do you think that it has driven the development of the palo (which includes cante and dance)? In accompaniment, I can kind of grasp its influence, but as a solo performance art, I am not so clear, it has not been around very long. I agree that it may have some subliminal and fashionable affect but do you have an example that I can grasp? I am not qualified to have a firm opinion on this subject, so I paraphrase the late Robin Totton, a respected Flamencologist with whom I had a few copas in London and Jerez. quote:
Even the playing of guitar solos is a fairly modern development, and more often heard outside Andalusia than in: its music is based on the song and the accompanying falsetas the guitarist plays to introduce the song and between verses. Furthermore, the solo guitar remains flamenco only insofar as it stays faithful to the character of the song... The solo instrument either conveys [the dramatic expressions of extreme emotion in the song] or else weaves a delicate filigree round it - Song of the Outcasts , 2003
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Foro Flamenco founder and Admin
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Date Mar. 30 2016 10:55:50
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