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Magazine ExpoFlamenco
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  • Magazine
    • international
    • News
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      • A bare rope
      • Of Guitar Players Ways
      • With one more couplet
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      • The chosen ones
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      • A window to the cante
      • Guest contributors
    • Research
    • Archive
  • international
  • News
    Presentation of 'Curro Carrasco's Big Party' at the Cloisters of Santo Domingo. Photo: Jerez City Council

    The Cloisters of Santo Domingo host 'The Great Curro Carrasco Festival' on June 26th

    Lo Ferro Ballet. Photo: Lo Ferro

    Lo Ferro: the selection trials for the Golden Melon begin

    Guitarist Dani de Morón will be performing at Espacio Turina, XXIV Biennial of Flamenco of Sevilla.

    The Espacio Turina celebrates flamenco guitar at the Seville Biennial

    The Chair of FlamencoThe Andalusian Folklore and Folk Studies Association of Jerez presented the third cycle of the Nights of San Juan festival. Photo: Jerez City Council

    The Jerez Chair pays tribute to Fosforito and the copla

    Manuel Martín Martín, favorite son of Écija. Photo: Écija City Council

    Manuel Martín Martín: Favorite Son of the City of Écija

    The musicologist Faustino Núñez, director of the Academy ExpoFlamenco.

    ExpoFlamenco Open your online academy for free!

    Older man with white hair and mustache in a brown jacket, wearing a mic, standing beside framed black-and-white portraits on a gallery wall.

    Pepe Lamarca, a smile for flamenco photography

    Israel Fernández presents 'Of Gold and Ivory' at the Alcázar, Seville Biennial.

    The Biennial brings to the Alcázar the living memory of flamenco

    José Mercé, Gold Medal for Merit in Fine Arts. Photo: Government of Spain

    José Mercé receives his Gold Medal of Fine Arts

    Honors to El Lebrijano in the Caracolá

    Honors to El Lebrijano in the Caracolá

    Speaker at a podium addressing a seated audience in a tiled interior, with an AQ Adelquivir banner to the left.

    Adelquivir presents the promotional video 'The flamenco in the Lower Guadalquivir'

    Third Spanish Music Academy Awards. Photo: FB Academy

    María Terremoto and Diego Amador triumph at Rosalía's Music Awards

    Interpretation Centre of Camarón, San Fernando. Photo: perezventana

    San Fernando hosts a congress on the life, work and legacy of Camarón

    Presentation of the XLI Don Antonio Chacón Cycle at the Peña The Bulería, Jerez Horse Fair. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The 41st Don Antonio Chacón Cycle is dedicated to Aunt Juana the Piper

    Winners of the Talent Contest Flamenco de Cante 'Naranjito de Triana' 2026. Photo: Heeren

    Luis Ortega, winner of the contest cante from the Cristina Heeren Foundation

    Flamencad 2026 presentation. Photo: Cádiz City Council

    Flamencad: flamenco roots and sea salt at the Baluarte de la Candelaria

    Project presentationFlamenco 'Without barriers'. Tablao Cardamomo, Madrid. Photo: Cardamomo

    El Cardamomo, first flamenco venue flamenco of the 100% inclusive world

    III SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía. Teatro Central, Seville. May 20, 2026. Photo: Lolo Vasco - SGAE Foundation

    The first prize of the SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía remains unoccupied

    Álvaro Martinete, winner of a previous edition of the SGAE Awards of Flamenco - Paco de Lucía. Photo: SGAE

    The Central Theatre of Seville hosts the III SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía

    Group of ten adults posing for a photo in front of a carved stone fountain on a sunny day.

    The Biennial returns to its emotional heart, the Lope de Vega Theatre

  • Interviews
  • Opinion
    Black-and-white poster showing two mirrored profiles facing each other, with bold red text 'Fosforito' and subtitle 'Since the beginning of time' below.

    'Fosforito. From the beginning of time', the definitive biography of the last great master of cante

    The singer? Rocío Jurado.

    Rocío Jurado never owed anyone anything.

    Ricardo Miño, Pepa Montes and the mayor of Seville, José Luis Sanz. Photo: Seville City Council

    Pepa Montes and Ricardo Miño in the Seville medal table

    The Pearl. Promotional image of 'My Path'.

    'My Path', the great album by El Perla

    Manolo from Huelva. Zayas Archives of Seville

    Manolo de Huelva, fifty years since his passing

    The Goatherd. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    The goatherd was born to be free.

    Vintage sepia portrait of a woman with a flower in her hair, dangling earrings, and a two-finger peace gesture near her face.

    Pepa de Utrera, the last one at the party

    José María Velázquez-Gaztelu, at the 36th Flamenco Cultural Week in Paradas. Photo: Paradas Town Hall Facebook page

    The flamenco parade gains a new local.

    Presentation of the Thursday cycle FlamencoCajasol. President Antonio Pulido and artists. Photo: Cajasol Fund

    Seville is reunited with the flamenco from Cajasol

    El Mochuelo, in the streets of Madrid. April 1936, a year before his death. The guitarist may be Florencio Campillo, who was 60 years old at the time. Photo taken from the newspaper Ahora.

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (and III)

    Scenario of the Peña El Higueral Flamenco Cultural Center, Huelva. Photo: Jesús Naranjo

    Censorship of humanity's heritage

    Juan Tejero and Irene Carrasco, from Jerez, have been teaching the art of dancing in Seville for 16 years. canteThe Iguana, Seville. Photo: Manuel Martín Martín

    Juan Tejero teaches and instructs

    The flamenco singer José Rico Jiménez, Pepe de la Isla.

    Pepe de la Isla, from Coín, Malaga

    Image of the Little Owl in the old press. "The Little Owl, who was the king of the farrucas, tells his glories and his sorrows to our collaborator Valdivielso."

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (II)

    Bernat Jiménez de Cisneros and Guillermo Castro. Photo: Lecternflamenco

    Atrilflamenco: A Digital Find in a Sea of Flamenco Misinformation

    Miguel Camacho, photographed at Bar Plata, opposite the Basilica of La Macarena, in August 2021. Photo: perezventana

    A true gentleman has passed away: farewell to Miguel Camacho

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (I)

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (I)

    Antonio Ortega Jr. Photo: Brotherhood of the Gypsies

    The arrow is here to stay

    Matilde Esteo, Manuel de Palma and Gregorio Fernández. Cultural Week of the Peña Flamenca La Soleá. Coliseo Theatre, Palma del Río. March 7, 2026. Photo: José Javier Martínez Bravo

    Golden Wedding Anniversary at La Soleá in Palma del Río

    Pepe Montaraz. Peña Flamenca Pepe Montaraz, Lebrija (Seville). October 1, 2023. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Goodbye to Pepe Montaraz

  • Chronicles
    El Pele recital. IV Guiri FestivaljondoArab Baths of PaloMares del Río, Seville. June 6, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (and IV): The Pele in the Netherlands and Upper

    Consuelo Haldón. Photo: Moguer Town Hall

    The truth that every fan carries within.

    Flamenco dancer Mari Paz Lucena. V Festival Flamenco trails of the CanteCMUM Ana María Delgado Romero, El Castillo de las Guardas (Seville) June 6, 2026. Photo: Manuel Martín Martín

    Mari Paz Lucena paved the way to glory

    'They Call Me the Crazy One', by Tino van der Sman, Cristina Hall and David Lagos. World premiere at the 4th Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, PaloMares del Río (Seville). June 5, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (III): Even to be crazy, you have to know

    Lola Yang and Malena Alba Kouriwa. IV Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, PaloMares del Río (Seville). June 4, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (II): Foreigners do not come to take exams

    Presentation of the 45th Córdoba Guitar Festival. Corral de la Morería, Madrid. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    'The White Queen' at the Cordoba Guitar Festival

    Gaspar de Holland and Jesús Méndez. IV Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, paloRiver Seas (Seville). June 3, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (I): party in Paloseas of the 'Mess'

    Recital by Dieguito Amador, Antonio Amador and Luis Amador. Flamenco Heritage Cycle. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. May 30, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The Amador family's ties

    Congress dome CamarónInterpretation Centre Camarón de la IslaSan Fernando (Cádiz). Photo: Congress Camarón

    Camarón It's not a myth

    recital of cante by José and Fernando Canela. Deep Paths Cycle FlamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs of Malaga. May 27, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    The Canela family's singing house

    'Smoke', by Rafaela Carrasco. Teatro de la Maestranza, Seville. May 24, 2026. Photo: Maestranza

    Rafaela Carrasco and the 'Smoke' that doesn't warm

    'Links', by Fuensanta La Moneta. Festival Flamenco From Esch, Luxembourg. May 22, 2026. Photo: Peter Martin

    La Moneta, prophet in Europe

    Recital by Mayte Martín. Andalusia Cycle FlamencoAlhambra Theatre, Granada. May 21, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    The sensitive courage of Mayte Martín

    Dance recital by Carmen de Utrera. Peña Flamenca La Polea, Seville. May 21, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Carmen de Utrera danced and left through the main gate

    'Center, step', by Borja Cortés. Festival Flamenco From Esch, Luxembourg. May 21, 2026. Photo: Peter Martin

    'Center, I'm passing': party at Casa Borja

    recital of cante by Alicia Morales. Peña La Platería, Granada. May 16, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    Alicia Morales: renewal of cante old age

    'Herencia Cantaora'. Alicia Gil and Carmela Gil. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. May 16, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Alicia and Carmela Gil: from elegance, taste and delicacy in the cante

    Delia Membrive and Juan Requena. Fever Festival CanteMarinaleda, Seville. Photo: Carmen Arjona

    Fever of Cante: the star of 'frivolous festivals'

    recital of cante From La Kaíta. Deep paths cycle of flamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs, Málaga. May 14, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    La Kaíta: Extremaduran racial power

    Tribute to Juan Ramírez. Marcelino Camacho Auditorium, Madrid. May 13, 2026. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    A miracle named Juan Ramirez

  • Authors
    • All
    • A bare rope
    • At street level
    • With one more couplet
    • Graphic chronicles
    • Of Guitar Players Ways
    • From inside
    • The Snub
    • Estela Flamenca
    • Guest contributors
    • Flamencos of the border
    • The chosen ones
    • Flamenco Room
    • A window to the cante
    Antonio Peña Carpio 'El Tolo' and Domingo Rubichi. Don Antonio Chacón Cycle. Cultural Center Flamenco Don Antonio Chacón, Jerez. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The Tolo is delivered to the Pope's house… cante

    Jose El Mijita

    South of flamenco from Jerez

    Pepe Marchena and the cante beautiful.

    El cante It's not pretty.

    María Antonia La Caramba, from Motril. Image: University of Granada website

    Far heels

    Gema's dance recital MoneoDon Antonio Chacón Cycle. CCF Don Antonio Chacón. May 2026. Photo: Juan Garrido

    Gem Moneo, present of the Jerez dance

    Antonio Fernández Díaz 'Fosforito', in the hall that bears his name at the Hotel Las Acacias, Puente Genil. Sep 2021. Photo: perezventana

    Three Voices to Define Flamenco

    On the law of retaliation in Gypsy culture.

    Killing is not part of Gypsy culture

    National Competition of Cante Jondo Antonio Mairena. Dukes of Arcos Palace, Mairena del Alcor, Seville. September 5, 2025. Photo: Kiko Valle

    That cante It is not yours

    Classic image of El Corral de la Morería, which is celebrating its seventieth anniversary. Photo: Morería website

    Seventy years of the Corral de la Morería

  • Archive
  • Login
  • Magazine
    • international
    • News
    • Recent
    • Opinion
    • Chronicles
    • Interviews
    • Authors
      • A bare rope
      • Of Guitar Players Ways
      • With one more couplet
      • From inside
      • Estela Flamenca
      • The chosen ones
      • Flamenco Room
      • A window to the cante
      • Guest contributors
    • Research
    • Archive
  • international
  • News
    Presentation of 'Curro Carrasco's Big Party' at the Cloisters of Santo Domingo. Photo: Jerez City Council

    The Cloisters of Santo Domingo host 'The Great Curro Carrasco Festival' on June 26th

    Lo Ferro Ballet. Photo: Lo Ferro

    Lo Ferro: the selection trials for the Golden Melon begin

    Guitarist Dani de Morón will be performing at Espacio Turina, XXIV Biennial of Flamenco of Sevilla.

    The Espacio Turina celebrates flamenco guitar at the Seville Biennial

    The Chair of FlamencoThe Andalusian Folklore and Folk Studies Association of Jerez presented the third cycle of the Nights of San Juan festival. Photo: Jerez City Council

    The Jerez Chair pays tribute to Fosforito and the copla

    Manuel Martín Martín, favorite son of Écija. Photo: Écija City Council

    Manuel Martín Martín: Favorite Son of the City of Écija

    The musicologist Faustino Núñez, director of the Academy ExpoFlamenco.

    ExpoFlamenco Open your online academy for free!

    Older man with white hair and mustache in a brown jacket, wearing a mic, standing beside framed black-and-white portraits on a gallery wall.

    Pepe Lamarca, a smile for flamenco photography

    Israel Fernández presents 'Of Gold and Ivory' at the Alcázar, Seville Biennial.

    The Biennial brings to the Alcázar the living memory of flamenco

    José Mercé, Gold Medal for Merit in Fine Arts. Photo: Government of Spain

    José Mercé receives his Gold Medal of Fine Arts

    Honors to El Lebrijano in the Caracolá

    Honors to El Lebrijano in the Caracolá

    Speaker at a podium addressing a seated audience in a tiled interior, with an AQ Adelquivir banner to the left.

    Adelquivir presents the promotional video 'The flamenco in the Lower Guadalquivir'

    Third Spanish Music Academy Awards. Photo: FB Academy

    María Terremoto and Diego Amador triumph at Rosalía's Music Awards

    Interpretation Centre of Camarón, San Fernando. Photo: perezventana

    San Fernando hosts a congress on the life, work and legacy of Camarón

    Presentation of the XLI Don Antonio Chacón Cycle at the Peña The Bulería, Jerez Horse Fair. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The 41st Don Antonio Chacón Cycle is dedicated to Aunt Juana the Piper

    Winners of the Talent Contest Flamenco de Cante 'Naranjito de Triana' 2026. Photo: Heeren

    Luis Ortega, winner of the contest cante from the Cristina Heeren Foundation

    Flamencad 2026 presentation. Photo: Cádiz City Council

    Flamencad: flamenco roots and sea salt at the Baluarte de la Candelaria

    Project presentationFlamenco 'Without barriers'. Tablao Cardamomo, Madrid. Photo: Cardamomo

    El Cardamomo, first flamenco venue flamenco of the 100% inclusive world

    III SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía. Teatro Central, Seville. May 20, 2026. Photo: Lolo Vasco - SGAE Foundation

    The first prize of the SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía remains unoccupied

    Álvaro Martinete, winner of a previous edition of the SGAE Awards of Flamenco - Paco de Lucía. Photo: SGAE

    The Central Theatre of Seville hosts the III SGAE Award Flamenco Paco de Lucía

    Group of ten adults posing for a photo in front of a carved stone fountain on a sunny day.

    The Biennial returns to its emotional heart, the Lope de Vega Theatre

  • Interviews
  • Opinion
    Black-and-white poster showing two mirrored profiles facing each other, with bold red text 'Fosforito' and subtitle 'Since the beginning of time' below.

    'Fosforito. From the beginning of time', the definitive biography of the last great master of cante

    The singer? Rocío Jurado.

    Rocío Jurado never owed anyone anything.

    Ricardo Miño, Pepa Montes and the mayor of Seville, José Luis Sanz. Photo: Seville City Council

    Pepa Montes and Ricardo Miño in the Seville medal table

    The Pearl. Promotional image of 'My Path'.

    'My Path', the great album by El Perla

    Manolo from Huelva. Zayas Archives of Seville

    Manolo de Huelva, fifty years since his passing

    The Goatherd. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    The goatherd was born to be free.

    Vintage sepia portrait of a woman with a flower in her hair, dangling earrings, and a two-finger peace gesture near her face.

    Pepa de Utrera, the last one at the party

    José María Velázquez-Gaztelu, at the 36th Flamenco Cultural Week in Paradas. Photo: Paradas Town Hall Facebook page

    The flamenco parade gains a new local.

    Presentation of the Thursday cycle FlamencoCajasol. President Antonio Pulido and artists. Photo: Cajasol Fund

    Seville is reunited with the flamenco from Cajasol

    El Mochuelo, in the streets of Madrid. April 1936, a year before his death. The guitarist may be Florencio Campillo, who was 60 years old at the time. Photo taken from the newspaper Ahora.

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (and III)

    Scenario of the Peña El Higueral Flamenco Cultural Center, Huelva. Photo: Jesús Naranjo

    Censorship of humanity's heritage

    Juan Tejero and Irene Carrasco, from Jerez, have been teaching the art of dancing in Seville for 16 years. canteThe Iguana, Seville. Photo: Manuel Martín Martín

    Juan Tejero teaches and instructs

    The flamenco singer José Rico Jiménez, Pepe de la Isla.

    Pepe de la Isla, from Coín, Malaga

    Image of the Little Owl in the old press. "The Little Owl, who was the king of the farrucas, tells his glories and his sorrows to our collaborator Valdivielso."

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (II)

    Bernat Jiménez de Cisneros and Guillermo Castro. Photo: Lecternflamenco

    Atrilflamenco: A Digital Find in a Sea of Flamenco Misinformation

    Miguel Camacho, photographed at Bar Plata, opposite the Basilica of La Macarena, in August 2021. Photo: perezventana

    A true gentleman has passed away: farewell to Miguel Camacho

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (I)

    The Little Owl, the Rosetta Stone of cante: eight unreleased recordings (I)

    Antonio Ortega Jr. Photo: Brotherhood of the Gypsies

    The arrow is here to stay

    Matilde Esteo, Manuel de Palma and Gregorio Fernández. Cultural Week of the Peña Flamenca La Soleá. Coliseo Theatre, Palma del Río. March 7, 2026. Photo: José Javier Martínez Bravo

    Golden Wedding Anniversary at La Soleá in Palma del Río

    Pepe Montaraz. Peña Flamenca Pepe Montaraz, Lebrija (Seville). October 1, 2023. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Goodbye to Pepe Montaraz

  • Chronicles
    El Pele recital. IV Guiri FestivaljondoArab Baths of PaloMares del Río, Seville. June 6, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (and IV): The Pele in the Netherlands and Upper

    Consuelo Haldón. Photo: Moguer Town Hall

    The truth that every fan carries within.

    Flamenco dancer Mari Paz Lucena. V Festival Flamenco trails of the CanteCMUM Ana María Delgado Romero, El Castillo de las Guardas (Seville) June 6, 2026. Photo: Manuel Martín Martín

    Mari Paz Lucena paved the way to glory

    'They Call Me the Crazy One', by Tino van der Sman, Cristina Hall and David Lagos. World premiere at the 4th Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, PaloMares del Río (Seville). June 5, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (III): Even to be crazy, you have to know

    Lola Yang and Malena Alba Kouriwa. IV Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, PaloMares del Río (Seville). June 4, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (II): Foreigners do not come to take exams

    Presentation of the 45th Córdoba Guitar Festival. Corral de la Morería, Madrid. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    'The White Queen' at the Cordoba Guitar Festival

    Gaspar de Holland and Jesús Méndez. IV Guiri Festivaljondo. Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa Theater, paloRiver Seas (Seville). June 3, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Guirijondo 2026 (I): party in Paloseas of the 'Mess'

    Recital by Dieguito Amador, Antonio Amador and Luis Amador. Flamenco Heritage Cycle. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. May 30, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The Amador family's ties

    Congress dome CamarónInterpretation Centre Camarón de la IslaSan Fernando (Cádiz). Photo: Congress Camarón

    Camarón It's not a myth

    recital of cante by José and Fernando Canela. Deep Paths Cycle FlamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs of Malaga. May 27, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    The Canela family's singing house

    'Smoke', by Rafaela Carrasco. Teatro de la Maestranza, Seville. May 24, 2026. Photo: Maestranza

    Rafaela Carrasco and the 'Smoke' that doesn't warm

    'Links', by Fuensanta La Moneta. Festival Flamenco From Esch, Luxembourg. May 22, 2026. Photo: Peter Martin

    La Moneta, prophet in Europe

    Recital by Mayte Martín. Andalusia Cycle FlamencoAlhambra Theatre, Granada. May 21, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    The sensitive courage of Mayte Martín

    Dance recital by Carmen de Utrera. Peña Flamenca La Polea, Seville. May 21, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Carmen de Utrera danced and left through the main gate

    'Center, step', by Borja Cortés. Festival Flamenco From Esch, Luxembourg. May 21, 2026. Photo: Peter Martin

    'Center, I'm passing': party at Casa Borja

    recital of cante by Alicia Morales. Peña La Platería, Granada. May 16, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    Alicia Morales: renewal of cante old age

    'Herencia Cantaora'. Alicia Gil and Carmela Gil. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. May 16, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Alicia and Carmela Gil: from elegance, taste and delicacy in the cante

    Delia Membrive and Juan Requena. Fever Festival CanteMarinaleda, Seville. Photo: Carmen Arjona

    Fever of Cante: the star of 'frivolous festivals'

    recital of cante From La Kaíta. Deep paths cycle of flamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs, Málaga. May 14, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    La Kaíta: Extremaduran racial power

    Tribute to Juan Ramírez. Marcelino Camacho Auditorium, Madrid. May 13, 2026. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    A miracle named Juan Ramirez

  • Authors
    • All
    • A bare rope
    • At street level
    • With one more couplet
    • Graphic chronicles
    • Of Guitar Players Ways
    • From inside
    • The Snub
    • Estela Flamenca
    • Guest contributors
    • Flamencos of the border
    • The chosen ones
    • Flamenco Room
    • A window to the cante
    Antonio Peña Carpio 'El Tolo' and Domingo Rubichi. Don Antonio Chacón Cycle. Cultural Center Flamenco Don Antonio Chacón, Jerez. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The Tolo is delivered to the Pope's house… cante

    Jose El Mijita

    South of flamenco from Jerez

    Pepe Marchena and the cante beautiful.

    El cante It's not pretty.

    María Antonia La Caramba, from Motril. Image: University of Granada website

    Far heels

    Gema's dance recital MoneoDon Antonio Chacón Cycle. CCF Don Antonio Chacón. May 2026. Photo: Juan Garrido

    Gem Moneo, present of the Jerez dance

    Antonio Fernández Díaz 'Fosforito', in the hall that bears his name at the Hotel Las Acacias, Puente Genil. Sep 2021. Photo: perezventana

    Three Voices to Define Flamenco

    On the law of retaliation in Gypsy culture.

    Killing is not part of Gypsy culture

    National Competition of Cante Jondo Antonio Mairena. Dukes of Arcos Palace, Mairena del Alcor, Seville. September 5, 2025. Photo: Kiko Valle

    That cante It is not yours

    Classic image of El Corral de la Morería, which is celebrating its seventieth anniversary. Photo: Morería website

    Seventy years of the Corral de la Morería

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Interview with Juan Toro, author of 'Diego de Morón – Biography of the Duende'

"It's been a wonderful adventure, one of those you never want to end," says Juan Toro, who is writing a biography of Diego de Morón, his lifelong friend and eccentric guitarist. Cruel fate decreed Diego's death shortly after the book's presentation. Here we speak with the author.

Estela Zatania by Estela Zatania
15 September 2025
Reading time: 7 mins reads
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Diego de Morón and Juan Toro. Photo: Juan Toro

Diego de Morón and Juan Toro. Photo: Juan Toro

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Juan Toro Barea He was born in Morón de la Frontera in 1958, and in that world, with hardly any television or radio, he was fascinated by the flamenco Since he was little, he developed a real interest in art over time. jondo, and his expertise in the genre led him to write a book in 1998: Flamenco memory of an Andalusian feelingHe recently published a biography of Diego from Moron, a lifelong friend of his, an eccentric guitarist, son of the admired singer Luis Torres Joselero, and nephew of Diego del Gastor. Cruel fate brought about the death of Diego de Morón shortly after the presentation of his biography. Here we speak with the author about the new book.

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1 قبل شهر

 

Juan, how did the idea of ​​writing Diego de Morón's biography come about?

<scan>Well, it’s an idea I’ve always had. Around the 1970s and beginning of the eighties, I had a very close friendship with Diego, like brothers. Those were years of shared youthful pastimes and unlimited complicity. For this reason, I always had the idea of honoring his person and his music through a biography, because a musician with a personality such as Diego’s deserves nothing less in order to make his work known and recognized.</scan>

Where does your relationship with Diego come from? Has it been difficult to gather information and research his life?

Regarding the first question, it’s a bit what I explained earlier. I was taking guitar classes with Diego and we became friends with a very special connection which led to our sharing many hours. We traveled together a lot looking for adventure, I’d go to his house and listen to him play for hours. Like I say, a beautiful friendship was born, deep and profound, lasting for several years, until I moved away from Morón and we continued to be in contact but much less often.

As far as collecting data and investigating his life, I confess it wasn’t easy. A lot has been written about Diego, but nearly always about his music, his performances or his role in the continuation of his uncle Diego’s guitar-playing. Little has been written or spoken about Diego with regard to his path through life, his infancy, his adolescence. His military service, his trips to the U.S., to Japan, his tours of Italy, his time in Catalonia with his brother José Luis, his sentimental relationships, in general everything important in a person’s life, all the more so someone as eccentric as Diego. But I confess I had a great time, it was a wonderful adventure, the kind of experience you want never to end.

 

"Diego is a key player in this musical heritage and in this very original way of playing and sounding. He shared very similar vital vibrations with his uncle Diego del Gastor. In my opinion, I believe that in Dieguito resided the last bastion of the Diego del Gastor school, at least in its most integral and vital conception."

 

Juan Toro Barea. JTB Archive.
Juan Toro Barea. JTB Archive.

 

What role has Diego played in the so-called Morón guitar? What sets him apart musically from the rest of the Gastoreño guitar family?

Well, through genetics. The musical heritage of Diego del Gastor was transmitted mainly through his four nephews: Paco, Agustín, Juan, and Dieguito. They are the first and most natural heirs of the Gastor universe: the quartet that inherited his artistic sensitivity and his racial imprint. Nevertheless, and interestingly, each of them has his own sensibility and is very different from the others. In this sense, Diego plays a most essential role within this musical heritage and this highly original way of playing and sounding. In my view, without this being a discredit to anyone, Diego shared very similar vital vibrations with his uncle Diego del Gastor. In my opinion, Dieguito embodied the last stronghold of Diego del Gastor’s school, at least in its purest and most vital conception.

How do you rate Morón's touch? Are you aware of the wide range of opinions on the subject?

Of course, I am fully aware of the range of opinion, and even the infighting the topic has triggered. In the book I speak about the importance of the revolution in guitar-playing as a result of Paco de Lucía and several others. The most important development in the history of guitar. But I don’t think there’s any conflict between what we feel about Paco, and another concept of flamenco guitar, a different emotional channel. These are fully compatible concepts. Diego himself was a fervent admirer of Paco’s. The thing is, we’re stuck in a dynamic and have crossed a line we are often unable to understand where we’re headed and why. Everyone is caught up in the revolution, although not everyone has revolutionary capability. As I was saying before, it’s a matter of how flamenco playing is conceived. And it would be a mistake to make comparisons—a great absurdity. Dieguito’s aesthetic concern was on another plane, and that’s where I feel the noblest and truest part of the human condition resides. It belongs to another era, which might be the most ancient or the most modern, but it isn’t the same as everyone else’s. I am a great admirer of Paco de Lucía and his entire universe, but I must say that I am more deeply rooted in and attuned to the emotion, talent, and truth conveyed by the playing of my homeland.

You seem intolerant of the fandanguera era. Do you consider yourself a neo-jondista?

If we remove from the term neojondista those connotations that might be taken as pejorative, then yes. If by neojondista we understand belonging to an aesthetic current that embraces classical flamenco but from a contemporary vision or sensibility, then yes, I do consider myself neojondista. I believe there was an era, the so-called ópera flamenca, which in general was not good for the conservation and dignification of flamenco, if we mean the word flamenco to represent the most original aspect of our cultural identity. And mind you, I say this with utmost respect for all tendencies and tastes. As far as that influence in the flamenco of Morón, it clearly had an influence, because it contributed to the popularity of flamenco in general, and that of Morón in particular on an international scale, which in turn triggered an atmosphere that brought life to Morón, to local flamenco and to the general zone of influence.

 

"One of my main goals when writing Diego de Morón's biography was to vindicate his figure. To contribute to the dissemination and dignification of a colossal musician and a unique figure in Morón and the guitar world." flamenco. (…) Time will put Diego in his rightful place in history.

 

Diego de Morón. Photo: Manuel Gil
Diego de Morón. Photo: Manuel Gil

 

How has the era of foreigners influenced Morón? You must have been a child then.

Yes, as you say, that was the mid-sixties and early seventies. I was a child but I have memories of those times. My parents owned a bar in Morón, the Tropezón, it’s still operating. Don Pohren would pass by regularly because it was on the way from Morón to the finca Espartero. He loved to converse, and was very intelligent, in love with flamenco through and through, fascinated with Diego del Gastor and anything that moved around him. Later on I had a great deal of contact with him. As far as the influence of that era on the flamenco in Morón, obviously it had an influence because it helped spread interest in Moròn and international visitors which in turn enhanced flamenco locally.

Do you think Diego has been fairly recognized as a guitarist?

Absolutely not. One of the prime objectives in writing his biography was to defend his career. To value and contribute to the spread, contribution and dignification of a colossal musician and a unique figure of Morón and flamenco guitar. We all love to honor the personal merit of people after they’re gone. I’m convinced time will put Diego in his rightful place in history. ♦

 

 

Estela Zatania

Estela Zatania

Born in Jerez, she is a singer, guitarist, dancer and writer. She is a true flamenco fan. Her articles have been published in numerous specialist magazines and she is a bilingual lecturer in Europe, the United States and Canada.

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