Welcome to a new edition of the Rosa Fina Festival, where the flamenco, Andalusian art and music are experienced in Casares.
This year we celebrate 50 years in the cante de Diego Reyes in which he has kept alive the echo of his great-uncle The Boy of the Fine Rose of Casares.
We invite you to enjoy the shows produced especially for the festival and the performances that capture the essence of the flamenco and Andalusian music.
festival of flamenco and Andalusian music
The Rosa Fina festival continues its commitment to a total experience around the flamenco and Andalusian music, with a program that combines performances by the cante, dance, folklore and fusion in a place as special as Casares, an Andalusian town nestled in an exceptional natural setting, between the mountains and the sea, which gives its people a very special character.
Tradition and avant-garde
In Casares, the echoes of the old peasant festival of fandango dances coexist naturally with the flamenco and a love for popular music. This spirit guides a festival open to the challenges of the present, championing the talent of our fans while incorporating artists and professionals with innovative and exciting formulas that help keep the passion for music alive. flamenco.
Casares, a living stage
Every year, for a few days in summer, Casares becomes a laboratory of ideas and vibrant experiences, fostering the meeting of fans and artists, between music and other arts, with original proposals that explore the possibilities of flamenco Beyond the music, while respecting its roots, it takes it to new places. You're invited to join us for the celebration.

A tribute to the Child of the Fine Rose
The festival is named after Francisco Doncel Quirós, Niño de la Rosa Fina (1896-1981). A flamenco singer of humble origins, he achieved success in the 30s, recording 13 slate plates.
Rosa Fina represents a generation of great artists cut short by the Civil War. From being presented in Madrid in 1933 as the colossus of cante Andalusian, he spent the end of the war with his family in a concentration camp for republican exiles in France.
Countryman and contemporary of Blas Infante; companion of La Niña de los Peines, Angelillo or Carbonerillo; friend of Corruco and Fosforito; in love until the end cante and his people. His life and work belong to the memory of Casares and to the history of Flamenco.




