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Encyclopedia > Flamenco music
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Flamenco performance by the La Primavera group

Flamenco is a song, music and dance style which is strongly influenced by the Gitanos, but which has its deeper roots in Moorish musical traditions. Flamenco culture originated in Andalusia (Spain), but has since become one of the icons of Spanish music and even Spanish culture in general.


"Nuevo Flamenco", or New Flamenco, is a recent variant of Flamenco which has been influenced by modern musical genres, like rumba, salsa, pop, rock and jazz.


Originally, flamenco consisted of unaccompanied singing (cante). Later the songs were accompanied by flamenco guitar (toque), rhythmic hand clapping (palmas), rhythmic feet stamping and dance (baile). The toque and baile are also often found without the cante, although the song remains at the heart of the flamenco tradition. More recently other instruments like the cajón (a wooden box used as a percussion instrument) and castanets (castañuelas) have been introduced.

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Flamenco history

Many of the details of the development of flamenco are lost in Spanish history. There are several reasons for this lack of historical evidence:

  • The turbulent times of the people involved in flamenco culture. The Moors, the Gitanos and the Jews were all persecuted and expelled by the Spanish Inquisition at various points in time as part of the Reconquista.
  • The Gitanos mainly had an oral culture. Their folk songs were passed on to new generations by repeated performances in their social community.
  • Flamenco was for a long time not really considered an art form worth writing about according to Spaniards. Flamenco music has also slipped in and out of fashion several times during its existence.

Granada, the last Muslim stronghold, fell in 1492 when the armies of the catholic king Ferdinand II of Aragon and queen Isabella of Castile reconquered this city after about 800 years of mainly Moorish rule. The Treaty of Granada was created to have a formal base for upholding religious tolerance, and this paved the way for the Moors to surrender peacefully. For a few years there was a tense calm in and around Granada, however the inquisition did not like the religious tolerance towards Muslims and Jews. Therefore the inquisition used religious arguments to convince Ferdinand and Isabella to break the treaty and force the Moors and Jews to become Christians or leave Spain for good. In 1499, about 50,000 Moors were coerced into taking part in a mass baptism. During the uprising that followed, people who refused the choices of baptism or deportation to Africa, were systematically eliminated. What followed was a mass flee of Moors, Jews and Gitanos from Granada city and the villages to the mountain regions (and their hills) and the rural country.


It was in this socially and economically difficult situation that the musical cultures of the Moors, Jews and Gitanos started to form the basics of flamenco music: a Moorish singing style expressing their hard life in Andalusia, the different compas (rhythm styles), rhythmic hand clapping and basic dance movements. Many of the songs in flamenco still reflect the spirit of desperation, struggle, hope, pride, and late-night partying of the people during this time. Much later other local traditional Spanish musical traditions would also influence, and be influenced by, the traditional flamenco styles.


The first time flamenco is mentioned in literature is in 1774 in the book Cartas Marruecas by José Cadalso. The origin of the name flamenco however, is a much-debated topic. Some people believe it is a word of Spanish origin and originally meant Flemish (Flamende). However, there are several other theories. One theory suggest an Arabic origin taken from the words felag mengu (meaning: 'peasant in flight' or 'fugitive peasant').


During the so-called golden age of flamenco, between 1869-1910, flamenco music developed rapidly in music cafés called cafés cantantes. Flamenco dancers also became one of the major attractions for the public of those cafés. Similarly, guitar players supporting the dancers increasingly gained a reputation, and so flamenco guitar as an art form by itself was born. Julián Arcas was on of the first composers to write flamenco music especially for the guitar.


The flamenco guitar (and the very similar classical guitar) is a descendent from the lute. The first guitars are thought to have originated in Spain in the 15th century. The traditional flamenco guitar is made of Spanish cypress and spruce, and is lighter in weight and a bit smaller than a classical guitar, to give the output a 'sharper' sound.


In 1922, one of Spain's greatest writers, Federico García Lorca and renowned composer Manuel de Falla organised the Fiesta del Cante Jondo, a folk music festival dedicated to cante jondo ("deep song"). They did this to stimulate interest in this, by that time unfashionable, flamenco music style. Two of Lorca's most important poetic works, Poema del Cante Jondo and Romancero Gitano, show Lorca's fascination with flamenco.


Flamenco styles

Flamenco
Stylistic origins: Spanish, Gitano and Arab folk music
Cultural origins: Granada, Cádiz, Jérez de la Frontera, Cordoba and Sevilla
Typical instruments: Guitar, hand clapping, cajón
Mainstream popularity: Sporadic except among Gitanos, mostly popular in Spain and France
Derivative forms:
Subgenres
Alegrías - Bulerias - Tangos - Fandangos - Farruca - Guajiras - Peteneras - Sevillana - Siguiriyas - Soleares - Tientos - Zambra - and many others, see the palos list below.
Fusion genres
New Flamenco
Regional scenes
Other topics
Canté Chico - Canté Jondo - Canté Intermedio - Falseta

Flamenco music styles are called palos in Spanish. There are over 50 different styles of flamenco. A palo can be defined as the basic rhythmic pattern of a flamenco style, but also covers the whole musical and cultural context of a particular flamenco style.


The rhythmic patterns of the palo's are also often called compás. A compás is characterised by a recurring pattern of beats and accents. These recurring patterns make up a number of different rhythmic and musical forms known as toques.


To really understand the different palos it is also important to understand their musical and cultural context:

  • The mood intention of the palo (dancing - Fandango, consolation - Solea, fun - Buleria, etc.).
  • The set of typical melodic phrases, called falseta's, which are often used in performances of a certain palo.
  • The relation to similar palos.
  • Cultural traditions associated with a palo (mens dance - Farruca)

The most fundamental palos are: Toná, Soleá, Fandango and Seguiriya. These four palos all belong in the cante jondo category and form the rhythmic basis for nearly all the other palos.


Flamenco cante consists of a number of traditional (and not-so-traditional) forms, with characteristic rhythmic and harmonic structures. The rhythm (compas) is perhaps the most fundamental distinguishing feature of the different flamenco forms. The cante jondo, called the mother of flamenco, consists of 12 beats, with accents on the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 10th, and 12th beats. Songs are composed of several falseta's with rhythms defined by the song form.


Some of the forms are sung unaccompanied, while others usually have a guitar and sometimes other accompaniment. Some forms are danced while others traditionally are not. Amongst both the songs and the dances, some are traditionally the preserve of men and others of women, while still others would be performed by either sex. Many of these traditional distinctions are now breaking down; for example the Farruca is traditionally a man's dance, but is now commonly performed by women too.


The classification of flamenco forms is not entirely uncontentious, but a common and convenient first classification is into three groups. The deepest, most serious forms are known as cante jondo (or cante grande), while relatively light, frivolous forms are called cante chico. Forms which do not fit into either category but lie somewhere between them are classified as cante intermedio. Many flamenco artists, including some considered to be amongst the greatest, have specialised in a single flamenco form.

Cantés of Flamenco
Canté Jondo Canté Intermedio Canté Chico
Siguiriyas Bulerias Alegrías
Soleares Tangos Fandangos
Tientos Farruca
Peteneras Guajiras
Sevillana
Verdiales

Palos

Toná Palos

  • Debla
  • Martinete
  • Saeta
  • Toná

Soleá Palos

  • Alboreá
  • Alegrías
  • Bambera
  • Bulerías - Bulerias (Luis Maravilla. 31 seconds,133Kb)
  • Campanilleros
  • Caña
  • Cantiña
  • Caracoles
  • Carcelera
  • Cartagenera
  • Colombiana
  • Mariana
  • Mirabrás
  • Nana
  • Petenera
  • Polo
  • Romance
  • Romera
  • Rondeña
  • Sevillana
  • Soleá - Soleares (Juan Serrano. 30 seconds,118Kb)
  • Trillera
  • Vidalita
  • Zambra
  • Zorongo

Fandango Palos

  • Fandango
    • Verdiales - fandango variation from Málaga
    • Jaleos - fandango variation based on the Andalusian scale. Rythmic predecessor of the bulería and of the soleá.
  • Fandanguillo
  • Farruca - Farruca (Sabicas. 35 seconds,147Kb)
  • Garrotín
  • Granaína
  • Guajira - Guajiras (Sabicas. 35 seconds,158Kb)
  • Jabera
  • Malagueña
  • Media
  • MediaGranaína
  • Milonga
  • Minera
  • Rumba
  • Tango
  • Taranta
  • Taranto
  • Tiento

Seguiriya Palos

Music of Spain
Andalusia Aragon
Balearic Islands Basque
Canary Islands Castile, Madrid and Leon
Catalonia Extremadura
Galicia, Cantabria and Asturias Murcia
Navarre and La Rioja Valencia
Classical and Opera - Folk and Flamenco - Pop and Rock - Classic guitar and Hip hop
Timeline and Samples
Awards Amigo Awards
Charts Asociacion Fonografica Y Videografica Espanola.
Festivals Festival De La Canción De Benidorm
Media Fans, Mundo Joven
National anthem "Marcha Real"

Flamenco artists

Flamenco occurs in two types of settings. The first, the Juerga is an informal gathering where people are free to join in creating music. This can include dancing, singing, violin, Palmas (hand clapping), or simply pounding in rhythm on an old orange crate. Flamenco, in this context, is very dynamic; It adapts to the local talent, instrumentation, and mood of the audience. One tradition remains firmly in place: Singers are the most important part.


The professional concert is more formal and organized. The most common performance usually has only one or more instruments (guitar is almost always at the center). Dancers are the next addition, followed by singers.


It is rare to find an artist who has mastered performing in both settings at the same level.


An overview of the various flamenco artists can be found in the following categories:

  • Category: Flamenco singers
  • Category: Flamenco guitarists
  • Category: Flamenco dancers

External Links


  Results from FactBites:
 
FLAMENCO by All About Spain (515 words)
Flamenco dance arrived to its climax, being the major attraction for the public of those cafés cantantes.
The time from 1910 to 1955 Flamenco singing is marked by the ópera flamenca, with an easier kind of music such as fandangos and cantes de ida y vuelta.
You have not listened authentical Flamenco if not in a juerga with a small group of friends, at midnight somewhere in the South of Spain, when there is nothing around but the voice, the guitar and the body of a dancer moving in the moonlight.
Flamenco: Not Nouveau (906 words)
Flamenco is not danceable or playable by the general public.
A so-called 'flamenco' guitarist who does not know how to play for a flamenco singer and dancer is missing the most important and essential part of his education.
Flamenco has been around in its present form since around the 1840s and really started to become noticed by the public around the 1890s, when jazz was getting off the ground in the USA.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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