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Forgotten Sounds of Flamenco

Forgotten Sounds of Flamenco

José Miguel Hernández Jaramillo

The podcast "Forgotten Sounds of Flamenco" proposes a journey to the world of sounds, stories, spaces and characters that were part of the early stages of flamenco, and that in many cases today are forgotten about the histories of music and flamenco. It is conducted by the ethnomusicologist José Miguel Hernández Jaramillo, with the aim of sharing some of the results of his research work in this matter with all people passionate about history, culture, music and flamenco.

35 - 34. The most popular flamenco songs between 1895 and 1915
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  • 35 - 34. The most popular flamenco songs between 1895 and 1915

    Hit lists are a great way to get an insight into the most popular songs of a specific time frame. For this episode, we have curated a definitive list of the best flamenco hits, considering the recordings produced in the first two decades of the recording industry. We will thoroughly inspect the top ten highest-ranked flamenco songs (palos) on this remarkable list.

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    Fri, 19 Apr 2024 - 15min
  • 34 - 33. The flamenco compositions of Manuel Font de Anta

    The Sevillian composer Manuel Font de Anta is perhaps best known for authoring some of the most emblematic processional marches of Holy Week, such as "Amarguras" or "Soleá dame la mano." What is not so well known is that Font de Anta also composed some flamenco works for piano. In this episode, we review some of these works, which are entirely unknown, and listen to some of them. 


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    Fri, 05 Apr 2024 - 13min
  • 33 - 32. The panaderos as a flamenco “palo”

    The name "the panaderos" was given to popular music and dance in Spain in the 19th century. They probably arrived to Spain from Mexico, where it was already being danced two and a half centuries ago. It was a common "palo" in the flamenco of the 19th century and somehow, as we see in this episode, never disappeared. We review the history of the panaderos in flamenco and listen to some of them from the 19th century, some of which still need to be discovered.

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    Fri, 22 Mar 2024 - 12min
  • 32 - 31. The great soprano Anne Judic singing flamenco

    At the end of the 19th century, one of the most important European singers of the time, the French Anne Judic, triumphed in Spain, Mexico, and Cuba, singing one of the most famous flamenco songs of the time: the peteneras. In this episode, we review who Anne Judic was, how she arrived in Spain, where she learned to sing the peteneras, and why she drove half the world crazy with her voice. We also hear her own voice singing on an old wax cylinder and some of the flamenco compositions inspired by Anne herself.

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    Fri, 08 Mar 2024 - 13min
  • 31 - 30. Mythical Theories: From Paterna to Peten

    The history of flamenco has been built through various theories. Some of them we call "mythical theories," which are those that, although they were formulated with arguments of dubious rigor, everyone has ended up accepting them as accurate over time. In this episode, we describe what we mean by "mythical theories," and we describe a couple of examples that refer to the same stick: the petenera.

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    Fri, 23 Feb 2024 - 17min
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