Paco Peña

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Flamenco guitarist

Paco Pena's long career in flamenco began when he first picked up his brother's guitar around the age of six. Singing, dancing, and celebrating the ups and downs of life through musical expression were long a part of his life. Steeped in the experiences of his youth, Pena's dedication to the art and history of flamenco culture and music has guided him through more than thirty years of performance. He has won numerous awards for his guitar playing and presented audience-pleasing performances that have introduced people all over the world to the intricacies of flamenco singing, dancing, and guitar playing. In reviewing a 2000 show for the Evening Mail in Birmingham, England, Dave Freak wrote of Pena, "The … dexterity of his fingers was little short of breathtaking, his mastery of both his guitar and flamenco unquestionable."

Pena was born Francisco Pena Perez on June 1, 1946, in Cordoba, Spain. He was the youngest child of nine, which included seven sisters. His family was poor and lived in shared housing with nine other families. Pena described the house to Michael Church of the Independent, " [We] rented two rooms of an old house … sharing a toilet and tub with nine other families … we were like one very big family. Every birth, marriage or bereavement involved everyone. And we were surrounded by music—sung and played, not out of a radio." Growing up in those conditions, Pena was deeply influenced by the way music permeated daily life.

Shy as a young child, Pena found that by playing guitar he could connect with the people around him much easier. He also found that it enriched his life, giving it some meaning. He explained to Arminta Wallace of the Irish Times, "For me it was a pretty significant tool in my communication with people. So I took it really seriously. I just played and played and played." He described to Church the joy he found in performing, staying out late at night, playing his guitar in the street, happy to know that what he was doing was pleasing those who listened. By age 12, Pena was performing for money. Throughout his teens he played and toured with small flamenco groups. His goal eventually was to see the world and continue playing guitar. He told Annie Taylor of the Guardian, "My dreams were not focused in Cordoba. Playing guitar and moving on was my fascination."

Found His Way to London
In the late 1960s, Pena found himself performing in England as accompanist for a group of dancers on tour. His solo debut in England came in 1968 when he played at London's Wigmore Hall. That same year he opened for Jimi Hendrix when he played at the Royal Festival Hall. In 1968, he also released his first album, The Incredible Paco Pena. Two years later he founded the Paco Pena Flamenco Dance Company. Through this collaborations with other flamenco performers Pena has created touring theater events that bring to light different aspects of flamenco culture.

Throughout the 1970s, Pena worked with his flamenco company while also releasing several albums, including Paco Pena Presents the Art of Flamenco, Art of Flamenco Guitar, and Fabulous Flamenco. Pena's goal has always been to bring the art and history of flamenco to the world. In fact, Pena is well versed in the historical events that fused together to create what he considers to be one of the most passionate forms of music. Mitch Potter related Pena's discussion of that history in the Toronto Star, "Flamenco at its purest … emerged in the early 19th century from a poverty-stricken melting pot of Gypsies, Moors, Jews and Spaniards in southern Spain's Andalucia region. It was originally an expression of song and dance that poignantly mirrored the people's brutal persecution." Pena's most successful album was Flamenco Guitar Music of Montoya and Ricardo. Released in 1987, it was acclaimed by the critics, with sales that put it on the Billboard charts for 30 weeks. At one point the album was in the Top 10 chart for crossover artists.

Flamenco's Past and Future
Pena made a home for himself in London while also maintaining ties to his birthplace of Cordoba. In 1981, Pena founded the Centro Flamenco Paco Pena in Cordoba, Spain, which became one of the leading schools of flamenco. He explained his motivation for opening the center on his website, "I wanted to build a bridge between the rest of the world and the region of my birth. For anyone wanting to learn flamenco, seeking to appreciate it to the full, there is no substitute for the potent atmosphere of Andalucía."

Pena often pulls performers for his flamenco company from the students who come to the flamenco center. It is with the flamenco company that Pena has created some of his most important and challenging works. Pena described on his website the importance of the collaborative effort that is part of his flamenco company, "The depth of feeling—and the tragedy of flamenco's history—is always there. We take flamenco very seriously, not least the singing. The singers are the greatest source of inspiration for all of us, whether dancers or guitarists." At first their performances were limited to London and small festivals throughout Europe. Soon the company was touring and performing in Australia, Israel, and Hong Kong. Eventually, the company went on to create grander works.

In 1991, Pena created the work called Misa Flamenca. Based on the Catholic Mass, the performance integrated flamenco with a classical choir, thus bringing together two of the main ingredients that helped form Pena as a child—flamenco and Catholicism. The performance premiered in London at the Royal Festival Hall. Misa Flamenca was then taken on a world tour. Its North American debut was in 1993, in Vancouver, British Columbia. Other touring theatrical shows by Pena include Musa Gitana, which premiered in 1999, and Voces y Ecos, which was directed by Jude Kelly. His other touring shows include A Compas! and Requiem Flamenco.

Pena has also worked outside of his flamenco troupe, branching out for solo tours and performances at festivals around the world. He has also teamed up with composer John Williams and the formerly exiled Chilean music grouped called Inti-Illimani. In 1988, the collaboration produced the album Fragments of a Dream. They also released an album in 1990 called Leyenda. In 2000, this unlikely collaborative group went on tour together. As late as the mid-2000s, he was part of a trio of acts featured at the Hispanic and Latin-American Guitar Extravaganza in Daytona, Florida.

Pena's talent is not only evident in his guitar-playing ability, which garnered him Guitar Player Magazine awards numerous years in a row for best flamenco guitarist, but also in a number of other areas. He is a teacher and mentor to rising talents in flamenco. He has composed and produced critically acclaimed theater pieces. He is also one of traditional flamenco's most vocal and dedicated proponents.

Selected discography
The Incredible Paco Pena, Fontana, 1968.(With Los Maracuchos) Carnival, Fontana, 1969.Paco Pena Presents the Art of Flamenco, CBS, 1970; reissued, Sony, 1995.Flamenco Puro Live, Decca, 1971; reissued, 1997.Art of Flamenco Guitar, Decca, 1972.Fabulous Flamenco!, Decca, 1975; reissued 1991.Flamenco from Spain, Decca, 1977.La Gitarra Flamenca, Decca, 1977.The Flamenco World of Paco Pena, Decca, 1978.Paco Pena Live in London, Decca, 1979.Paco Pena Flamenco Company: Live at Sadler's Wells, Decca, 1980.Flamenco Vivo: Live in Munich, Aconcagua, 1981.(With Paco Lucia) Paco Doble, Phillips, 1983.Flamenco Guitar Music of Ramon Montoya and Nino Ricardo, Nimbus, 1987.Azahara, Nimbus, 1988.(With John Williams and Inti-Illimani) Fragments of a Dream, CBS, 1988.(With Eduardo Falu) Encuentro, Nimbus, 1989.(With John Williams and Inti-Illimani) Leyenda, CBS, 1990.Misa Flamenca, Nimbus, 1991.The Art of Paco Pena, Nimbus, 1993.Arte Y Pasion, Live in Concert Nimbus, 1999.(With The Losadas) Paco Pena Flamenco Guitar, Nimbus, 2000.Paco Pena Flamenco Master, Manteca Records, 2003.
Sources
Periodical
Birmingham Post (Birmingham, UK), May 3, 2004, p 13.
Evening Mail (Birmingham, UK), July 12, 2000, p. 23.
Guardian (Manchester, UK), November 10, 1997, p. 2.
Independent (London), April 17, 2006, p. 41.
Irish Times (Dublin), July 3, 2006, p. 12.
New York Times, May 18, 1987, p. C.16.
Times (London), October 16, 2002, p. 19.
Toronto Star, April 14, 1989, p. D8; April 20, 1989, p. C2.
Vancouver Sun (Vancouver, BC), February 26, 2005, p. D5.

Online
Paco Pena Official Website, http://www.pacopena.com/ (November 5, 2006).
"Paco Pena Flamenco Dance Company," A&L News Release, http://www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu/archive/2003–2004/pr/pena.asp (November 5, 2006).
  • Genres: Latin

Biography

Flamenco guitarist Paco Peña has issued albums over the years on his own (such as 1978's Flamenco, 1988's Azahara, and 2000's Flamenco Guitar), in addition to collaborating with others, such as the Flamenco Dance Company with the Losadas (1999's Arte Y Pasion) and Eduardo Falu (1989's Encuentro). ~ Greg Prato, Rovi
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Paco Peña

Paco Peña in the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos, Córdoba. Photo: Paul Magnussen
Background information
Birth name Francisco Peña Pérez
Born (1942-06-01) June 1, 1942 (age 69)
Córdoba, Spain
Genres Flamenco, Instrumental music
Occupations Composer, Guitarist, Dramatist, Mentor
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1967–present
Associated acts John Williams (guitarist), Inti-Illimani, Paco Peña Flamenco Dance Company, Eduardo Falú
Website
Notable instruments
Gerundino Fernández Guitars

Paco Peña (born 1 June 1942) is a Spanish flamenco guitarist. He is regarded as one of the world's foremost traditional Flamenco players.[1]

Born in Córdoba, Spain as Francisco Peña Pérez, Paco Peña began learning to play the guitar from his brother at age 6 and made his first professional appearance at 12. Encouraged by his family, he left home and began performing throughout Spain with a government-sponsored folk music and dance program. This led to calls from professional Flamenco companies in Madrid and the Costa Brava, where Peña established himself as a highly-regarded accompanist to Flamenco dance and singing. However, dissatisfied with life on the coast and seeking a new challenge,[2] he moved to London in the late 1960s to become a soloist. Initially the star attraction in the Restaurante Antonio in Covent Garden, Peña generated so much interest among a British public previously uninitiated in Flamenco that he soon found himself sharing concerts with artists such as Jimi Hendrix, and made his solo debut at Wigmore Hall in 1967. It was not long before Peña was touring the world, both as a soloist and an accompanist with performances at Carnegie Hall in New York City, the Royal Albert Hall in London and the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. He later founded the world's first university course on flamenco guitar, at the Rotterdam conservatory of music.

Peña also created the Centro Flamenco Paco Peña in Córdoba, and was responsible for the founding of the now-celebrated annual Córdoba Guitar Festival, which has seen appearances by other Flamenco greats such as Manolo Sanlúcar and Paco de Lucía.

In 1997 Peña was named Oficial de la Cruz de la Orden del Mérito Civil by King Juan Carlos of Spain.

His most famous compositions include his Misa Flamenca, a Flamenco Mass, and Requiem for the Earth, both of which have received great critical acclaim.

He has also had a number of notable collaborations, significantly with the guitarist Eduardo Falú and the Chilean group Inti-Illimani.

Paco Peña has homes in London and Córdoba. Recent shows include Flamenco Sin Fronteras, which explores the relationship between Venezuelan music and Flamenco and Quimeras which features the Paco Peña Flamenco Dance Company performing a story about immigrants from Africa arriving in Andalusia.

Peña is a good friend of classical guitarist John Williams, and they have frequently played concerts together.

Discography

CD

  • 2008 A Compás! (Live)
  • 2007 His Essential Recordings (Anthology)
  • 2007 A Flamenco Guitar Recital (Live)
  • 2007 Requiem for the Earth
  • 2004 Fabulous Flamenco / La Gitarra Flamenca (Remastered)
  • 2003 Flamenco Master: Essential flamenco recordings (Anthology)
  • 2000 Flamenco Guitar (Twofer of Montoya/Ricardo & Azahara)
  • 1999 Arte y Pasión (Live)
  • 1995 The Art of Paco Peña
  • 1992 Encuentro (with Eduardo Falú)
  • 1992 Azahara
  • 1991 Misa Flamenca
  • 1990 Leyenda (Live in Cologne Inti-Illimani with John Williams)
  • 1987 Fragments of a Dream (Inti-Illimani with John Williams)
  • 1986 Flamenco Guitar Music of Ramón Montoya and Niño Ricardo

LP

  • 1985 Flamenco Vivo
  • 1980 Live at Sadler's Wells
  • 1979 Live in London
  • 1978 The Flamenco World of Paco Peña
  • 1977 La Gitarra Flamenca [sic]
  • 1976 Toques Flamencos (with book)
  • 1975 Fabulous Flamenco!
  • 1973 The Art of the Flamenco Guitar
  • 1972 Flamenco Puro Live
  • 1970 Flamenco
  • 1970 The Art of Flamenco
  • 1969 Carnival (with Los Marachuchos)
  • 1968 The Incredible Paco Peña
  • 1966 Flamenco! (El Sali & his Ballet Espagnol)

References

External links


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Paco Peña (Latin Artist, '70s-2000s)
Flamenco Master (2003 Album by Paco Peña)
Paco Peña (Classical Musician)
Tomasito (Latin Artist)