• About Us
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Memberships
  • Partners
No results
See all results
Friday, May 8, 2026
No results
See all results
Magazine ExpoFlamenco
Free Fan Subscription
  • 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
    'Magnificat', by María Moreno. Festival Flamenco from Nimes. Theater of Nîmes, Bernadette Lafon Hall. January 16, 2026. Photo: Sandy Korzekwa

    The Villains of the Cycle Flamenco champions art without constraints

    Eight adults pose for a group photo in a hall with flamenco event posters in the background.

    Flamenco On Fire: second part of the 'Andalusian Cadence 1925-1950' trilogy

    Vicente Amigo. Photo: FB Córdoba Guitar Festival

    XLV Cordoba Guitar Festival: Flamenco History in Action

    Presentation of the Teatro Alameda concerts at La Bienal. Mercado del Barranco, Seville. May 4, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Teatro Alameda: youth, memory and savagery at the Seville Biennial

    Presentation of the XI Festival Flamenco City of Huelva. Photo: Huelva City Council

    Festival Flamenco City of Huelva: emotion, roots and the return of Arcángel

    Manuela Román and Pepe Solano. Presentation of the poster for the XXXV Festival Flamenco La Yerbabuena, Las Cabezas de San Juan (Seville). Photo: Kiko Valle

    The poster and program for the Yerbabuena Festival have been presented.

    Presentation of the documentary 'You Will Be Farruquito'. Photo: Seville European Film Festival

    The Artillery Factory opens to the Seville Biennial with premieres by Ana Morales and Pablo Martín Caminero

    Presentation of the Conference Flamenco and the Generation of '27. Photo: Seville Chamber of Commerce

    The Conference was presented Flamenco and Generation of '27

    José Antonio Rodríguez. III Madrid Community Guitar Festival. Photo: Fest Guitarra

    José Antonio Rodríguez closed the III Guitar Festival of the Community of Madrid

    Jury of the Cante of the Mines 2026. Photo: Fund Cante The Mines

    Figures of canteDance, criticism, and research, on the jury of Las Minas

    Paco del Pozo. XXVI Tío Luis el de la Juliana Festival. Isabel de España University Residence Hall, Madrid. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    The 'Isa', the most flamenco Madrid

    Documentary 'Bernabé, the smile of flamenco', by the young filmmaker Dany Ruz. Promotional photo.

    Bernabé, more than just Paco de Lucía's dentist

    The Crumbs.

    Ambitious lineup at the IX FlamencoMestizos

    The Madrid City Council recognizes the work of Tablao 1911. Photo: Tablao 1911

    Madrid pays tribute to Tablao 1911: a century guarding the temple of flamenco

    Morente, at La Tertulia with Tato Rébora and the poets Ángel González and Luis García Montero. Photo: Tato Archive

    The Tertulia in Granada, where Morente's memory lives on.

    Presentation of the 70th Utrera Gypsy Stew. Gourmet Experience, El Corte Inglés Plaza del Duque, Seville. April 8, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    ExpoFlamenco unites in solidarity with the Gypsy Stew of Utrera

    Presentation of the show 'El mundo por montera', from the Seville Biennial. Hotel Meliá Colón, Seville. April 17, 2026. Photo: Laura León - Biennial

    Flamenco in the Bullring: the Biennial takes on 'The world by the horns'

    Presentation of the Andalusia cycle.FlamencoCentral Theatre, Seville. Photo: Ministry of Culture, Regional Government of Andalusia

    Andalusia.Flamenco It brings together emerging figures and talents in the arts jondo

    Presentation of the Sevilla Flamenca Circuit 2026. Photo: Prodetur

    The Sevilla Flamenca circuit brings art back to the stage. jondo at peñas

    'Babel (Work in progress)', by Compañía David Coria. XXX Jerez Festival. Blas Infante Social Center. March 2, 2026. Photo: @Festival de Jerez - Rina Srabonian

    David Coria, Paula Comitre, Alfonso Losa and Sara Jiménez, at the In Progress 2026 residencies

  • Interviews
  • Opinion
    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

    Manuel Cano Tamayo.

    Manuel Cano's dedication to the guitar

    Rafael Amador from Seville, on the cover of the album 'Pasa la vida', by Pata Negra.

    Rafael Amador: Goodbye from the heart…

    Luis Soler and Manuel Martín Martín, in Mairena del Alcor, May 2017. Photo: Carmelo Camino - MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (and III)

    How did we learn to forget Antonio?

    Manuel Martín Martín and Luis Soler Guevara, at the tribute to the latter held at the University of Málaga, 2017. Photo: MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (II)

    Luis Soler and Manuel Martín Martín, in Mairena del Alcor, May 2017. Photo: Carmelo Camino - MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (I)

  • Chronicles
    recital of cante By Esmeralda Rancapino. V Manuel Herrera Rodas Flamenco Cultural Spring Festival. El Pozo de las Penas Flamenco Cultural Gathering, Los Palacios y Villafranca, Seville. April 30, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Esmeralda Rancapino or the cotton candy

    'With hierarchy', by José Valencia. Cádiz Cycle Flamenco. Center Flamenco La Merced, Cádiz. April 30, 2026. Photo: Modesto Sánchez Sierra

    José Valencia, family matters

    recital of cante by David Carpio. Peña La Platería, Granada. April 25, 2026. Photo: Antonio Conde

    David Carpio: Jerez as his flag

    'Cante 'woman's', by Naike Ponce, Pilar La Gineta and Teresa Hernández. Cádiz Cycle is Flamenco. Center Flamenco La Merced, Cádiz. April 24, 2026. Photo: Antonio Barce

    Naike, La Gineta… and the tears of Teresa Hernández

    recital of cante by Luis MoneoDeep Paths Cycle FlamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs, Málaga. April 23, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    Luis Moneo: heredity and personality

    La Macanita sings the songs of Antonio Gallardo. Villamarta Theatre, Jerez. April 18, 2026. Photo: Courtesy of Compañía Macanita

    La Macanita reigns in Villamarta with the romantic idyll between her voice and Gallardo

    Guitar recital by Mercedes Luján. Peña La Platería, Granada. April 18, 2026. Photo: Carlos Fernández - ExtampasFlamencas

    The renewal of the feminine touch: Mercedes Luján

    Jaime Cala: scenic architecture of the jondo

    Jaime Cala: scenic architecture of the jondo

    'Warm-up', by Rocío Molina. Cycle Flamenco It will be you. Cervantes Theatre, Malaga. April 15, 2026. Photo: Álvaro Cabrera

    Rocío Molina: to begin, always to begin

    recital of cante From El Canana. XXXVI Flamenco Cultural Week of Paradas. La Comarcal, Peña Flamenca Miguel Vargas. April 14, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The Canana and the taste of orthodoxy

    Manuel's Recital Moneo The Uproar. XXXVI Flamenco Cultural Week of Paradas. La Comarcal, Peña Flamenca Miguel Vargas, Paradas, Seville. April 12, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The roll in the hay cante Manuel Moneo 'Commotion' in Paradas

    Recital of cante By Manuel Gerena. Teatro Principal of Puerto Real, Cádiz. April 10, 2026. Photo: José A. Tomás

    The light of Manuel Gerena

    Dance recital by El Barullo. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena From Seville. April 8, 2026. Photo: Juanmi - Flamencospellings

    The Gypsy Quarter of El Barullo

    recital of cante Juanelo's. Peña Flamenca La Bambera, Seville. March 21, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Juanelo: the pellizco and the stranded numbs

    Dance recital by La Repompilla. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. March 27, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    La Repompilla and the gypsy culture of the mamao dance

    recital of cante By Antonio Reyes. Flamenco Gathering El Pozo de las Penas, Los Palacios y Villafranca, Seville. March 28, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Antonio Reyes and the fat candy barbs

    Helga Molina, Ángeles Cerrejón, Rubén Franco, Kiko Valle, Trini Navarro, Rocío De los Santos, Carmen Arjona and Miguel Verdejo. Exaltation of the Saeta. peña Women's team from Huelva. Lent 2026. Photo: Jesús Naranjo

    Two truths intertwined in the arrow

    'Ellas', by Eva Esquivel. Isabel la Católica Theatre, Granada. March 26, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    The most flamenco Eve in Granada

    Antonio Reyes, at La Platería. Photo: Carlos Fernández - Extampasflamencas

    The sweet, flamenco voice of Antonio Reyes

    recital of cante by Angelita Montoya. Peña Flamenca Mazaco, Coria del Río. March 14, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Angelita Montoya: a torrent of brown colors

  • Authors
    • All
    • A bare rope
    • At street level
    • With one more couplet
    • Graphic chronicles
    • Of Guitar Players Ways
    • From inside
    • Estela Flamenca
    • Guest contributors
    • Flamencos of the border
    • The chosen ones
    • Flamenco Room
    • A window to the cante
    American researcher Tyler Barbour. Photo: LK Tyler

    Who said that the flamenco Is it only intimate and not social – too –?

    Rafael Romero "The Chicken".

    The flamenco elegance of Rafael Romero

    Award winners and authorities. Gala of the III Córdoba Art Awards FlamencoChair of FlamencoUniversity of Córdoba. April 30, 2026. Photo: Chair

    The Chair of FlamencoCórdoba art school strengthens its art awards flamenco

    Fabi and Curro Carrasco. Peña The Pearl of Cádiz, Cádiz. Photo: Juan Garrido

    La Fabi, a star near the sun

    Dome of the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Victory, Malaga, 1700.

    Fear of emptiness

    Four male musicians on a stage: one with a bright orange guitar singing into a mic while three others applaud nearby, with a mural backdrop and flags behind them at a performance venue.

    José Méndez and his flamenco singing vindication

    Festival in Fregenal de la Sierra, Badajoz, Extremadura. Photo: Estela Zatania

    Passion and tolerance in flamenco

    The poet Francisco Basallote.

    A tribute to Francisco Basallote, of secret poetry

    Caracolillo de Cádiz and Paco León, performing seguiriyas, in La Peña The Bulería. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The ideal taste of Caracolillo de Cádiz

  • 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
    'Magnificat', by María Moreno. Festival Flamenco from Nimes. Theater of Nîmes, Bernadette Lafon Hall. January 16, 2026. Photo: Sandy Korzekwa

    The Villains of the Cycle Flamenco champions art without constraints

    Eight adults pose for a group photo in a hall with flamenco event posters in the background.

    Flamenco On Fire: second part of the 'Andalusian Cadence 1925-1950' trilogy

    Vicente Amigo. Photo: FB Córdoba Guitar Festival

    XLV Cordoba Guitar Festival: Flamenco History in Action

    Presentation of the Teatro Alameda concerts at La Bienal. Mercado del Barranco, Seville. May 4, 2026. Photo: perezventana

    Teatro Alameda: youth, memory and savagery at the Seville Biennial

    Presentation of the XI Festival Flamenco City of Huelva. Photo: Huelva City Council

    Festival Flamenco City of Huelva: emotion, roots and the return of Arcángel

    Manuela Román and Pepe Solano. Presentation of the poster for the XXXV Festival Flamenco La Yerbabuena, Las Cabezas de San Juan (Seville). Photo: Kiko Valle

    The poster and program for the Yerbabuena Festival have been presented.

    Presentation of the documentary 'You Will Be Farruquito'. Photo: Seville European Film Festival

    The Artillery Factory opens to the Seville Biennial with premieres by Ana Morales and Pablo Martín Caminero

    Presentation of the Conference Flamenco and the Generation of '27. Photo: Seville Chamber of Commerce

    The Conference was presented Flamenco and Generation of '27

    José Antonio Rodríguez. III Madrid Community Guitar Festival. Photo: Fest Guitarra

    José Antonio Rodríguez closed the III Guitar Festival of the Community of Madrid

    Jury of the Cante of the Mines 2026. Photo: Fund Cante The Mines

    Figures of canteDance, criticism, and research, on the jury of Las Minas

    Paco del Pozo. XXVI Tío Luis el de la Juliana Festival. Isabel de España University Residence Hall, Madrid. Photo: Vicente Pachón

    The 'Isa', the most flamenco Madrid

    Documentary 'Bernabé, the smile of flamenco', by the young filmmaker Dany Ruz. Promotional photo.

    Bernabé, more than just Paco de Lucía's dentist

    The Crumbs.

    Ambitious lineup at the IX FlamencoMestizos

    The Madrid City Council recognizes the work of Tablao 1911. Photo: Tablao 1911

    Madrid pays tribute to Tablao 1911: a century guarding the temple of flamenco

    Morente, at La Tertulia with Tato Rébora and the poets Ángel González and Luis García Montero. Photo: Tato Archive

    The Tertulia in Granada, where Morente's memory lives on.

    Presentation of the 70th Utrera Gypsy Stew. Gourmet Experience, El Corte Inglés Plaza del Duque, Seville. April 8, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    ExpoFlamenco unites in solidarity with the Gypsy Stew of Utrera

    Presentation of the show 'El mundo por montera', from the Seville Biennial. Hotel Meliá Colón, Seville. April 17, 2026. Photo: Laura León - Biennial

    Flamenco in the Bullring: the Biennial takes on 'The world by the horns'

    Presentation of the Andalusia cycle.FlamencoCentral Theatre, Seville. Photo: Ministry of Culture, Regional Government of Andalusia

    Andalusia.Flamenco It brings together emerging figures and talents in the arts jondo

    Presentation of the Sevilla Flamenca Circuit 2026. Photo: Prodetur

    The Sevilla Flamenca circuit brings art back to the stage. jondo at peñas

    'Babel (Work in progress)', by Compañía David Coria. XXX Jerez Festival. Blas Infante Social Center. March 2, 2026. Photo: @Festival de Jerez - Rina Srabonian

    David Coria, Paula Comitre, Alfonso Losa and Sara Jiménez, at the In Progress 2026 residencies

  • Interviews
  • Opinion
    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

    Manuel Cano Tamayo.

    Manuel Cano's dedication to the guitar

    Rafael Amador from Seville, on the cover of the album 'Pasa la vida', by Pata Negra.

    Rafael Amador: Goodbye from the heart…

    Luis Soler and Manuel Martín Martín, in Mairena del Alcor, May 2017. Photo: Carmelo Camino - MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (and III)

    How did we learn to forget Antonio?

    Manuel Martín Martín and Luis Soler Guevara, at the tribute to the latter held at the University of Málaga, 2017. Photo: MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (II)

    Luis Soler and Manuel Martín Martín, in Mairena del Alcor, May 2017. Photo: Carmelo Camino - MMM Archive

    Luis Soler, the other voice of Malaga (I)

  • Chronicles
    recital of cante By Esmeralda Rancapino. V Manuel Herrera Rodas Flamenco Cultural Spring Festival. El Pozo de las Penas Flamenco Cultural Gathering, Los Palacios y Villafranca, Seville. April 30, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Esmeralda Rancapino or the cotton candy

    'With hierarchy', by José Valencia. Cádiz Cycle Flamenco. Center Flamenco La Merced, Cádiz. April 30, 2026. Photo: Modesto Sánchez Sierra

    José Valencia, family matters

    recital of cante by David Carpio. Peña La Platería, Granada. April 25, 2026. Photo: Antonio Conde

    David Carpio: Jerez as his flag

    'Cante 'woman's', by Naike Ponce, Pilar La Gineta and Teresa Hernández. Cádiz Cycle is Flamenco. Center Flamenco La Merced, Cádiz. April 24, 2026. Photo: Antonio Barce

    Naike, La Gineta… and the tears of Teresa Hernández

    recital of cante by Luis MoneoDeep Paths Cycle FlamencoUnicaja Foundation Museum of Arts and Popular Customs, Málaga. April 23, 2026. Photo: Lourdes Gálvez del Postigo

    Luis Moneo: heredity and personality

    La Macanita sings the songs of Antonio Gallardo. Villamarta Theatre, Jerez. April 18, 2026. Photo: Courtesy of Compañía Macanita

    La Macanita reigns in Villamarta with the romantic idyll between her voice and Gallardo

    Guitar recital by Mercedes Luján. Peña La Platería, Granada. April 18, 2026. Photo: Carlos Fernández - ExtampasFlamencas

    The renewal of the feminine touch: Mercedes Luján

    Jaime Cala: scenic architecture of the jondo

    Jaime Cala: scenic architecture of the jondo

    'Warm-up', by Rocío Molina. Cycle Flamenco It will be you. Cervantes Theatre, Malaga. April 15, 2026. Photo: Álvaro Cabrera

    Rocío Molina: to begin, always to begin

    recital of cante From El Canana. XXXVI Flamenco Cultural Week of Paradas. La Comarcal, Peña Flamenca Miguel Vargas. April 14, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The Canana and the taste of orthodoxy

    Manuel's Recital Moneo The Uproar. XXXVI Flamenco Cultural Week of Paradas. La Comarcal, Peña Flamenca Miguel Vargas, Paradas, Seville. April 12, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    The roll in the hay cante Manuel Moneo 'Commotion' in Paradas

    Recital of cante By Manuel Gerena. Teatro Principal of Puerto Real, Cádiz. April 10, 2026. Photo: José A. Tomás

    The light of Manuel Gerena

    Dance recital by El Barullo. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena From Seville. April 8, 2026. Photo: Juanmi - Flamencospellings

    The Gypsy Quarter of El Barullo

    recital of cante Juanelo's. Peña Flamenca La Bambera, Seville. March 21, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Juanelo: the pellizco and the stranded numbs

    Dance recital by La Repompilla. Peña Flamenca Torres Macarena, Seville. March 27, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    La Repompilla and the gypsy culture of the mamao dance

    recital of cante By Antonio Reyes. Flamenco Gathering El Pozo de las Penas, Los Palacios y Villafranca, Seville. March 28, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Antonio Reyes and the fat candy barbs

    Helga Molina, Ángeles Cerrejón, Rubén Franco, Kiko Valle, Trini Navarro, Rocío De los Santos, Carmen Arjona and Miguel Verdejo. Exaltation of the Saeta. peña Women's team from Huelva. Lent 2026. Photo: Jesús Naranjo

    Two truths intertwined in the arrow

    'Ellas', by Eva Esquivel. Isabel la Católica Theatre, Granada. March 26, 2026. Photo: Gilberto González

    The most flamenco Eve in Granada

    Antonio Reyes, at La Platería. Photo: Carlos Fernández - Extampasflamencas

    The sweet, flamenco voice of Antonio Reyes

    recital of cante by Angelita Montoya. Peña Flamenca Mazaco, Coria del Río. March 14, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

    Angelita Montoya: a torrent of brown colors

  • Authors
    • All
    • A bare rope
    • At street level
    • With one more couplet
    • Graphic chronicles
    • Of Guitar Players Ways
    • From inside
    • Estela Flamenca
    • Guest contributors
    • Flamencos of the border
    • The chosen ones
    • Flamenco Room
    • A window to the cante
    American researcher Tyler Barbour. Photo: LK Tyler

    Who said that the flamenco Is it only intimate and not social – too –?

    Rafael Romero "The Chicken".

    The flamenco elegance of Rafael Romero

    Award winners and authorities. Gala of the III Córdoba Art Awards FlamencoChair of FlamencoUniversity of Córdoba. April 30, 2026. Photo: Chair

    The Chair of FlamencoCórdoba art school strengthens its art awards flamenco

    Fabi and Curro Carrasco. Peña The Pearl of Cádiz, Cádiz. Photo: Juan Garrido

    La Fabi, a star near the sun

    Dome of the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Victory, Malaga, 1700.

    Fear of emptiness

    Four male musicians on a stage: one with a bright orange guitar singing into a mic while three others applaud nearby, with a mural backdrop and flags behind them at a performance venue.

    José Méndez and his flamenco singing vindication

    Festival in Fregenal de la Sierra, Badajoz, Extremadura. Photo: Estela Zatania

    Passion and tolerance in flamenco

    The poet Francisco Basallote.

    A tribute to Francisco Basallote, of secret poetry

    Caracolillo de Cádiz and Paco León, performing seguiriyas, in La Peña The Bulería. Photo: Juan Garrido

    The ideal taste of Caracolillo de Cádiz

  • Archive
No results
See all results
Magazine ExpoFlamenco
No results
See all results
  • Magazine
  • International
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Chronicles
  • Authors
  • Archive

Two hours with Lucía Beltrán, the flamenco singer who feels pain cante

Lucía Beltrán Sedano is a flamenco singer with deep roots and boundless energy. She cannot imagine a single day away from this art that grants only a select few the gift of carrying it in their voices.

Jesus Naranjo by Jesus Naranjo
16 January 2026
Reading time: 11 mins reads
268
A A
0
Flamenco singer Lucía Beltrán. Photo: Moguer Town Hall

Flamenco singer Lucía Beltrán. Photo: Moguer Town Hall

526
Share
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare by mailShare on WhatsappShare with ChatGPTShare with Perplexity

It flew… / When the canteThey were born / the little fandanguillo flew / and when it arrived in my Huelva / it said here I stay / how beautiful this land is.

Recent Posts

Fabi and Curro Carrasco. Peña The Pearl of Cádiz, Cádiz. Photo: Juan Garrido

La Fabi, a star near the sun

May 4th 2026
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

May 4th 2026
recital of cante By Esmeralda Rancapino. V Manuel Herrera Rodas Flamenco Cultural Spring Festival. El Pozo de las Penas Flamenco Cultural Gathering, Los Palacios y Villafranca, Seville. April 30, 2026. Photo: Kiko Valle

Esmeralda Rancapino or the cotton candy

May 1th 2026

She didn't quite reach the ground with her feet, as she's mentioned before, but she was a flamenco fairy, offering all the flavor that the fandango requires. Her hands, her small body, her gestures—everything moved, flew, and writhed with flamenco spirit in a rush-seated chair. A little less than fifteen years have passed since that day. Now we can speak without fear of being wrong of a singer who not only has the raw talent but also grows daily through hard work and that most difficult thing: passion. Passion with a capital P, a divine treasure.

Lucia Beltran Sedano (Trigueros, Huelva, 2004) is a flamenco singer with deep roots and a broad reach. She can't imagine a single day away from this art that has captivated so many of us and grants only a select few the gift of carrying it in their voices. Her roots are those that nurtured her within her family, to whom she owes much of her legacy. flamenco which she now exploits. The wings are that yearning to dedicate herself to what she loves most, the cantecontributing their bit and offering something different within the classic grandeur of this art.

Proof of his tireless artistic and professional work was the awarding, on November 16, of the young talent prize flamencos in the X International Awards of Flamenco Silverio Franconetti, distinctions intended for those great figures of art and research of flamenco with a career worthy of being recognized worldwide.

Lucía tells us that she learned she was going to be awarded the prize last May, although she wasn't aware of its immense importance and organization, nor the clear rationale behind the award. "I'm happy to have found myself surrounded by great masters of the field." cante"From dance and research, as well as occupying such an important platform as this. It's a real incentive and an honor.".

 

– Lucia, what became of that little girl who almost played with the fandango?

– Lucía the child is still there. The stage is still the game, but I see the flamenco as a profession. A profession I want to enjoy. To really enjoy what I do.

– Where does this passion come from? How does it grow?

– I have no record of a specific moment when it appeared flamenco in my life. I've had it ingrained since I was a child. Everyone in my family sings. My grandfather was a flamenco Seriously. A huge fan. Flamenco, flamencoShe sang soleá, she did cantemelodic ones like the vidalita, and especially canteHe was a huge fan. In those days, there were no social media networks, no YouTube, and all those things that help us so much today to learn about... cante He already enjoyed it, he knew canteAnd singers, he wrote a thousand lyrics for soleá. He recorded me canteHe would put them on his tape recorder and listen to them. He really liked Juan Valderrama.

– How did you get to Antonio Jaraqueño's school?

– As I mentioned, my grandfather taught me things, and Antonio noticed me, but we had to move to Córdoba. There I enrolled in the Conservatory. When I returned to Trigueros, at the age of eight, the Town Hall organized evenings in the Plaza del Melón, and there I sang some fandangos and songs by India Martínez. He insisted again that they take me to school.

 

"You can cry to a fandango by Chocolate or a malagueña by Chacón. (...) I really like Miguel Poveda; he's more of an artist than a flamenco singer. I adore Sandra Carrasco. She has artistic and professional sensitivity. I greatly enjoy those who have dedicated their lives to studying flamenco." cante, like Carmen Linares or Mayte Martín»

 

Lucía Beltrán. Photo: cienxcienflamenco
Lucía Beltrán. Photo: cienxcienflamenco

 

– In the mirror of Antonio Rodríguez Jaraqueño and other masters you look to, what reflection do you see?

Antonio is demanding of me, and very clear. He corrects me at the right moment. That makes me improve. He gives me a lot of freedom. And when he wants to teach me something from a specific flamenco singer, he tells me: study this from this singer. I learn a lot from other colleagues, like Antonio de Patrocinio: guitarist, friend, and teacher. I have a lot to learn from him, both from cante as well as what I should offer in each place I go.

– Which flamenco singers do you follow?

– I love La Niña de los Peines, Fosforito, and Enrique Morente. I'm a big fan of Enrique. He was and still is at the forefront of… canteBut every flamenco singer has something special; you can cry to a fandango by Chocolate or a malagueña by Chacón. You can learn something from every singer, both the classics and the contemporary ones. I really like Miguel Poveda; he's more of an artist than a singer. I remember some tangos from Triana at the Teatro de la Maestranza that I've seen countless times. I adore Sandra Carrasco. She has both artistic and professional sensitivity. I greatly enjoy those who have dedicated their lives to studying flamenco. cante, such as the teacher Carmen Linares or Mayte Martín.

– Are you going down that road?

– I spend all day studying, from the moment I wake up until I go to bed. I want to be sure of what I do on stage. I know almost all the styles, but I do what best suits my abilities. I like to do the canteIt's something that nobody does, or very little of it. Now I'm doing the canastera, the cabales, or the zambra, but I remember when I discovered the lorqueña in the voice of La Niña de los Peines. I immediately went to ask my teacher, Antonio Jaraqueño.

– Do you prefer flamenco singers who are a treasure trove of knowledge or those who have a dart in their throat and pinch you?

– If you don't know what you're doing, it's difficult to teach it. Knowledge is the foundation. From there, everyone has their own qualities, but the former is essential. Besides, it depends on the day. You're not always in the right frame of mind to do a certain thing. canteAnd if I don't feel well, I'll change it.

– What do you demand from a cante so that you can convey it to your listener?

– I try to get the most out of it, and I look at those who did or do that well. canteI keep shaping it until I find a way of doing it that I'm happy with.

 

"I ask life for the opportunity to continue being a flamenco dancer. To continue going on stage to enjoy myself and learn. Because there are things you learn through experience, but others you learn on stage, that much I know."

 

Lucía Beltrán, with the International Prize of Flamenco Silverio Franconetti. Cadiz, Nov 16, 2025.
Lucía Beltrán, with the International Prize of Flamenco Silverio Franconetti. Cadiz, Nov 16, 2025.

 

– In addition to the discipline of canteDo you like guitar and dance? Which guitar and/or dance teachers would you have liked to meet?

– I love the guitar. I'm more of a guitar enthusiast than a... canteIt would have been a dream to meet Paco de Lucía. I'm a big fan of Paco, Vicente, and Juan Carlos Romero. And I like contemporary guitarists like David de Arahal and Francis Gómez—he has harmony ingrained in him. In dance, I like, of course, the master Matilde Coral, Carmen Amaya, and Eva Yerbabuena. And from today, Juan Tomás de la Molía. He has something different. I don't know what it is, but he's different. Although what I really like is the cante de ahead.

– What do awards like the EFA or La Unión awards mean to you?

– Keep working. Awards are just awards. You have to keep going, because if you don't, you're left with nothing but the award. That's why studying is so important. I can really tell when someone goes on stage and has studied, or not. On November 16th, I felt honored to be sitting next to the masters Pele and Aurora Vargas, whom I admire so much. What's more, when he finished singing a soleá, Pele took my hand and led me offstage, implying that we were colleagues. For me, that's the real prize, feeling like you belong alongside such great artists. It also gives me the responsibility to keep defending my... cante And my career. When you go on stage you have to give one hundred percent. I've even sung with a kidney stone and a fever of forty degrees, but I love it so much… And every stage is an opportunity.

– How do you defend the fact of being sick and giving one hundred percent?

– The defense of that responsibility is in the mind. I like it so much that I don't care about the forum in which I act. You have made a commitment, and the commitment is until the end. I like it so much flamencoI enjoy it so much that even though it's a job, I don't see it that way. I'm lucky enough to do what I love most.

– Which places have been the most difficult?

– The most nervous I've ever been was at the National Competition in Córdoba. And I was very focused a few months ago at the Granada Biennial. Or during the saeta performance in Madrid, in front of three or four thousand people. It's a cante Very difficult. You have no references to begin with. Besides, I have a lot of respect for it because I'm a member of a brotherhood and I love it. flamenco.

– What inspires you about each place, each audience?

- The peñaThey're more traditional, more demanding. You feel right at home because of the close connection with the fans. They do a very important job and should support young people more. In fact, competitions are one way to do that. Theaters are colder, but I like them a lot. I'd enjoy myself so much at the Maestranza! On stage, I let go of my shyness and say things I'm not capable of saying offstage. And I like it when the audience tells me, 'That wasn't good,' or 'I didn't like it.' I'm a perfectionist. I believe that when you have a clear foundation and the right attitude, you can improvise, you can put your own stamp on it. I enjoy it when they tell me, 'I heard a cante And I know it's Lucia.' Perhaps it's a reward when you dedicate yourself to this twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

 

"On stage, I shed my shyness and say things I'm not capable of saying offstage. I enjoy it when people tell me, 'I heard a cante And I know it's Lucía.' Perhaps that's a reward when you dedicate yourself to this twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week."

 

Lucía Beltrán, with Jesús Naranjo through the streets of Huelva.
Lucía Beltrán, with Jesús Naranjo through the streets of Huelva.

 

– Besides being a flamenco singer, you also write. What do you write about?

– I'm an amateur who aspires to be an artist, and it's important for an artist to be able to express themselves through their lyrics, their compositions. In my lyrics, I tell my life story, my feelings. I think that when an artist tells their story on stage, it's also yours. That's what happens when you appreciate lyrics like those of Manuel Molina, Isidro Muñoz, Fosforito, or poets like Federico García Lorca, Juan Ramón Jiménez, or Moreno Galván, among others.

– What do you ask of the flamencoAnd what about life in relation to him? flamenco?

– I ask for the opportunity to continue being a flamenco dancer. To continue going on stage to enjoy myself and learn, because there are things you learn through experience, but others you learn on stage, that much I understand. I still attend veterans' gatherings where we revisit... canteI know things that are undervalued or rarely done, or I attend competitions as an audience member to meet new people. All of this helps me learn every day. I hope life continues to inspire me to seek out and work on what makes me different or special. And I would like to continue being Lucía Beltrán Sedano, an ordinary woman who enjoys and shares... flamenco and life with his family and friends.

– Since the beginning of the 21st century, Huelva has been making its mark with renowned artists. Your artistic career is just beginning in this second quarter of the century. Are you aware that you could be one of the artists of this era? That you could be one of those rising stars to watch?

– I feel like an ordinary person, but of course I'd love to make my mark. My main concern is studying and doing well. Whatever comes… we'll be here.

– And apart from the flamencoHow do you imagine it? What other Lucias are there?

– My life will not be detached from flamencoI have qualifications in early childhood education, occupational risk prevention, and piano and guitar, but I can't see myself doing anything other than... flamencoYou have to have a plan B – that's what my father says [smiles] – but I can't see myself in any other position than the flamenco.

 

And we walk along Martín Alonso Pinzón Avenue in Huelva, talking about Tomás Pavón, making her dream of an imaginary scene where Lucía de los Peines and Paco de Lucía are by her side. She tells me she can see herself singing siguiriya to one of the greats of flamenco dance: "The siguiriya encompasses so much in so few verses!" she remarks. She knows, as Sandra Carrasco told her, that not everyone can like it, and although things aren't always the same—neither the performer nor the listener—it's important to maintain a certain standard. Because, as Lucía learned from the maestro Fosforito, the singer who feels the pain of the cante He wins the battle with himself. I, who enjoy his eternal smile, his cante And with her singing style, I beg her to continue thrilling me with a zambra, with the four moons or with the cabal of Pena, Because he knows, because he has, and because he can. To do it in such different registers, or to soar with that little fandanguillo—or rather, that fandango—that landed on this blessed earth and with which she still soars. Time has passed since that day, but the singer, the person, remains. Lucía remains. ♦

 

https://expoflamenco.com/revista/wp-content/uploads/sites/17/2025/12/lucia-beltran-cantando-un-fandango-de-nina.mp4

Lucía Beltrán, as a child, singing a fandango.

https://expoflamenco.com/revista/wp-content/uploads/sites/17/2025/12/lucia-beltran-cantando-un-fandango.mp4

Lucía Beltrán, singing a fandango today.

 

 

Jesus Naranjo

Jesus Naranjo

Huelva, 1974. I was born in Flamenco at a table of cabales of the Peña Flamenca from Huelva. Since then, this art has been my oxygen. When I express myself, I do so from the heart and looking at the people, as if I were singing for Huelva.

Recent Posts

American researcher Tyler Barbour. Photo: LK Tyler
Authors

Who said that the flamenco Is it only intimate and not social – too –?

by Jose Ash
May 8th 2026
Rafael Romero "The Chicken".
Authors

The flamenco elegance of Rafael Romero

by Estela Zatania
May 6th 2026
'Magnificat', by María Moreno. Festival Flamenco from Nimes. Theater of Nîmes, Bernadette Lafon Hall. January 16, 2026. Photo: Sandy Korzekwa
News

The Villains of the Cycle Flamenco champions art without constraints

by ExpoFlamenco
May 6th 2026
Eight adults pose for a group photo in a hall with flamenco event posters in the background.
News

Flamenco On Fire: second part of the 'Andalusian Cadence 1925-1950' trilogy

by ExpoFlamenco
May 6th 2026
Vicente Amigo. Photo: FB Córdoba Guitar Festival
News

XLV Cordoba Guitar Festival: Flamenco History in Action

by ExpoFlamenco
May 6th 2026
Award winners and authorities. Gala of the III Córdoba Art Awards FlamencoChair of FlamencoUniversity of Córdoba. April 30, 2026. Photo: Chair
Authors

The Chair of FlamencoCórdoba art school strengthens its art awards flamenco

by Juan Garrido
May 5th 2026
Presentation of the Teatro Alameda concerts at La Bienal. Mercado del Barranco, Seville. May 4, 2026. Photo: perezventana
News

Teatro Alameda: youth, memory and savagery at the Seville Biennial

by ExpoFlamenco
May 4th 2026
Next article
Flamenco dancer Rafael Ramírez. Photo: Ana Palma

Rafael Ramírez's successful tour of the United States with his 'Chronicle of an Event'

Leave your comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *

AIE CAMPAIGN 2026
Lateral Banner FAN
Side Banner Academy
Banner Sidebar Shop

The Global Stage for Flamenco 

[pmpro_signup level="1" short="emailonly" redirect="https://expoflamenco.com/memberesias/confirmacion-de-membresia/?pmpro_level=1" submit_button="Join for free" title="Become a Free Fan" login="false" hidelabels="true"]

Follow expoflamenco

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Youtube Whatsapp
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Legal Notice
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Memberships
  • Partners
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Memberships
  • Partners

© 2015 - 2026 expoflamenco . All rights reserved.

Ok

Retrieve password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No results
See all results
  • Login
  • Studio
  • Agenda
  • Academy
  • Community
  • Podcast
  • TV
  • Shop

Copyright © 2026 ExpoFlamenco.