
All over the Andalusian and American towns people could hear songs
and dances that had been originated here and had gone there to come back
again, sometimes to eventually travel overseas anew. From the Guinean
Gulf to the Caribbean, then to Triana and the Bay of Cádiz, these tunes
continually melt, overlapped, in a delocalized, bubbling melting pot,
where jácaras, folías and chaconas existed as a common heritage both to
popular and educated music. It is normal then, for instance, to listen
to Guarachas de Zéspedes which remind us of Cádiz tanguillos, or to
discover medieval romances which had been preserved in the oral
tradition, fandangos of yore and today, siguiriyas set to the chords of a
passacaglia. In short, pieces of music that were written down centuries
ago which can be brought to life today thanks to the spontaneous
intuition of good musicians and, of course, good flamenco.
The inspired souls of Fahmi Alqhai and Arcángel have set their minds
to walk up the still-unexplored paths that result of the fertile
combination of flamenco and Baroque music. Arcángel and Alqhai keep a
dialogue which enables them to delve into a common past and present with
the help of music, a universal vehicle to brotherhood between nations
and cultures. With strong, difficult to classify personalities, these
artists combine a strict, academic music education along with a
restless, experimental spirit. Therefore, they will let themselves be
freely driven by their sheer music instinct. Who knows? Maybe, in a
natural, unexpected, intuitive way, they will bring back the original
sources of the remote flamenco, that Paradise Lost which no musicologist
ever found before. (Juan Ramón Lara / Seville, January 2012)
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