Flamenco NYC | New York Latin Culture Magazine

2021-12-30 05:12:00 By : Ms. Belan ForUDesigns

New York Latin Culture Magazine™

World-class Indigenous, European, African, Asian & Oceanian Culture since 2012

Flamenco is a Spanish music and dance form developed in Romani communities.

The Romani people are traveling court musicians from Northern India. We brought influences from the road through Persia, Turkey, the Balkans and Europe. The southern route brought influences from Israel, Arabia, and North Africa.

Flamenco came together in Andalucía, Spain. From there, it came to the Americas. Some Cuban and Peruvian traditions made their way back to Spain as Cantes de Ida y Vuelta (roundtrip songs).

A Palo Seco presents a Flamenco workshop and performance at Flushing Town Hall in Flushing, Queens on Sat, Jan 15 at 1pm (Workshop $5) and 2;15pm (performance $12). 🇪🇸

Flamenco Vivo Musicians of Flamenco are at 4W43 Gallery in Midtown on Fri, Jan 21, 2022. $35. 🇪🇸

Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca dance Spanish Flamenco at The Joyce in Chelsea for two weeks, Tue-Sun, Jan 25 – Feb 6, 2022. From $26. 🇪🇸

Celebrate Valentine’s Day with Nella Rojas, the Venezuelan Flamenco Jazz singer and 2019 Latin Grammy Best New Artist, at the Blue Note in Greenwich Village on Mon, Feb 14 at 8pm & 10:30pm (6pm & 10pm doors). From $25. 🇻🇪

Flamenco Vivo Tablao is at Le Poisson Rouge in Greenwich Village, on Sat, Feb 19, 2022. $50. 🇪🇸

Flamenco Vivo Fronteras is at the Joyce Theater in Chelsea, Tue-Sun, Jun 21-26, 2022. 🇪🇸

Nélida Tirado: Travesia Flamenca is New York Flamenco at Joe’s Pub in NoHo, Manhattan on Sun, Feb 27 at 7pm (6pm doors). $30. 🇪🇸

The 20th Flamenco Festival is at NY City Center Apr 22-24, 2022. 🇪🇸

Thank you for sponsoring New York Latin Culture Magazine:

Sonia Olla & Ismael Fernandez perform Spanish Flamenco at Drom in the East Village on Sat, Dec 11 at 8pm (7pm doors). 🇪🇸

Flamenco Vivo Holiday Fiesta, a Zambomba, the Andalusian Christmas caroling tradition, is at 4W43 Gallery in Midtown on Fri, Dec 10 at 7:30pm. $35. 🇪🇸

Albert Marques leads a Mediterranean Dialogues Flamenco Jazz Jam at Terraza 7 in Elmhurst, Queens on Thu, Dec 9 at 7pm. Free. 🇪🇸

The Albert Alabedra Trio plays Spanish Flamenco influenced by Miles Davis “Sketches of Spain” with a Spanish wine tasting at The Cecil Steakhouse (Minton’s) in Harlem, on Wed, Dec 8 at 7pm. $75. thececilharlem.com 🇪🇸

Barbara Martínez records personalized vinyl records that make very special holiday gifts, on Sun, Dec 5. Preorder only $20. 🇻🇪🇦🇷🇪🇸

Barbara Martínez sings Spanish Flamenco at Addictive Wine and Tapas in Jackson Heights, Queens on Sat, Dec 4 at 8pm. Free. 🇻🇪🇦🇷🇪🇸

Bárbara Martínez sings Spanish Flamenco for Alegrías at La Nacional in Chelsea on Sat, Nov 27 at 8pm. 🇪🇸🇻🇪🇦🇷

Rosario Flores sings Flamenco Pop at The Town Hall in Midtown, Manhattan on Thu, Nov 4 at 8pm. From $79. 🇪🇸

Alberto Alabedra plays Spanish Flamenco at Pangea in the East Village on Thu, Nov 4 at 7pm. $25. pangeanyc.com 🇪🇸

The Flamenco Vivo Gala is at the Hotel Chantelle Rooftop in the Lower East Side on Thu, Oct 21 at 7:30pm. From $150. flamenco-vivo.org 🇪🇸

Lara Bello and Granada Sounds sing Spanish Flamenco at Terraza 7 in Elmhurst, Queens on Sun, Oct 17 at 7pm. $10. 🇪🇸

The Flamenco Certamen USA 2021 Finals are at the NY Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center on Fri, Oct 15 at 7pm. $35. flamenco-vivo.org 🇪🇸

Albert Marques leads a Flamenco-Jazz jam at Terraza 7 in Elmhurst, Queens on Thu, Oct 14 at 7pm. $10. 🇪🇸.

Sonia Olla & Ismael Fernández and other Spanish immigrants celebrate Indigenous People Day at Columbus Circle on Mon, Oct 11 at 4:30pm. FREE. 🇪🇸

The Albert Alabedra Band plays Spanish flamenco jazz at Drom in the East Village on Thu, Sep 23 at 7pm (6:30pm doors). 🇪🇸

We used to have two good Flamenco dance companies. Now we have several.

The 20th Flamenco Festival is at NY City Center Apr 22-24, 2022. 🇪🇸

There is more traditional Flamenco Tablao at the Spanish social clubs in Manhattan and Queens.

Bárbara Martínez 

A Palo Seco apalosecoflamenco.com

Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana is one of NYC’s main Flamenco schools. flamenco-vivo.org

NY Times dance critic Alastair Macaulay called Soledad Barrio of Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca “one of today’s great dancers of any genre.” soledadbarrioandnocheflamenca.com

Sonia Olla & Ismael Fernández are Flamenco for Rock stars like Madonna and Ricky Martin. sonia-ismael.com

Flamenco Latino specializes in the Cuban influences of Rumba Flamenca.

Flamenco Festival New York City Center, Flamenco Festival Madrid and World Music Institute are New York Latin Culture Magazine flamenco festival sponsors.

WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE LE POISSON ROUGE Greenwich Village, NYC Saturday, March 14, 2020 🇪🇸

Continue Reading Niño de Elche & Leonor Leal Present “Colombiana” a Flamenco Show About Caribbean Influences

Thursday-Sunday, March 7-10, 2019 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL NYC NEW YORK CITY CENTER Midtown, NYC Sara Baras, one of the world’s great flamenco dancers (really) plays with gender in the shadows of flamenco for her company’s 20th Anniversary – Sponsored by New York City Center

Continue Reading Flamenco Festival New York City Center 2019 Sara Baras ‘Sombras’

Tuesday-Sunday, March 7-10, 2019 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL NYC JOE’S PUB, PUBLIC THEATER NoHo, NYC The Flamenco Festival organization (Madrid) sends the best artists from the flamenco heartland, Andalusia, Spain – Sponsored by Flamenco Festival (Madrid)

Continue Reading Flamenco Festival NYC 2019

You can enjoy Spanish flamenco at these New York City venues.

MIDTOWN, NYC Classical, jazz and pop concerts at one of the world’s most famous music halls, and Citywide ~ ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

MIDTOWN, NYC Dance theatre including the Fall for Dance Festival, Flamenco Festival, Alvin Ailey; and Manhattan Theatre Club Broadway revivals ~ ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading New York City Center

CHELSEA, NYC NYC’s international dance theater is a dance producer who has long developed dance in Cuba ~ ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

CHELSEA, NYC The Spanish Benevolent Society is one of NYC’s oldest social clubs and the last remnant of New York City’s “Little Spain.”

Learn to dance, the dance of Spain.

Teaches Flamenco dance, guitar, and singing – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

These flamenco performers are New Yorkers.

Continue Reading Bárbara Martínez Records Personalized Vinyl for Holiday Gifts

Tue-Sun, Nov 19 – Dec 1, 2019 CHELSEA, NYC ~ This flamenco show about prowling for partners feels like a Spanish flamenco bar with star power at the Joyce Theater

Continue Reading Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca ‘Entre Tú y Yo’

Wed-Fri, October 16-18, 2019 GREENWICH VILLAGE ~ One of New York City’s leading flamenco dance companies brings the Andalucían style of dancing in bars to Le Poisson Rouge

Continue Reading Tablao Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana

Thursday, March 7, 2019 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL JOE’S PUB, PUBLIC THEATER NoHo, NYC The musical half of NYC’s Sonia Olla & Ismael Fernández Flamenco Company presents his new album “Trato” (Deal) – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Ismael Fernández, Spanish Flamenco

Friday – Saturday, June 22 – 23, 2018 JAMAICA CENTER FOR THE ARTS Jamaica, Queens Rumba Flamenca is Spanish Flamenco with African-American and Caribbean influences

Continue Reading Flamenco Latino Más Allá

CHELSEA, Tue-Sat, Feb 13-25, 2018, Spanish flamenco dance theater ~ One of NYC’s great flamenco dancers presents her latest show.

Continue Reading Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca ‘Intimo’ at the Joyce

Guadalupe Inn Bushwick, Brooklyn Saturday, October 28, 2017

Continue Reading Nilko Andreas world-Classical guitar and sweaty Rumba Flamenco Pop

Andalusía, Spain is Flamenco’s home, but flamenco is loved around the world. It’s an expression of Hispanidad, our Hispanic Heritage. In the Hispanic world we teach our kids to dance flamenco so they will know who they are.

The world’s most important flamenco festival is the Flamenco Biennial. It is held every two years in Seville, Spain. The next one is in September 2020.

Sunday, October 10, 2021 RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL Midtown, Manhattan 🇪🇸

Continue Reading Alejandro Sanz Sings Spanish Pop at Radio City Music Hall

March 12, 2020 CARNEGIE HALL Midtown, Manhattan – Sponsored by Carnegie Hall

Continue Reading Buika is the Spanish Queen of Flamenco Soul

Sunday, March 29, 2020 WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE LE POISSON ROUGE Greenwich Village, NYC – An entertaining blend of flamenco, jazz and rock that is part of the Nuevo Flamenco movement out of Barcelona, Spain. – Sponsored by World Music Institute

Sunday, January 26, 2020 62nd GRAMMY AWARDS Los Angeles, California The Mexican rumba flamenco duo’s “Mettavolution” won Best Contemporary Instrumental Album

Continue Reading Rodrigo y Gabriela

Sunday, January 26, 2020 62nd GRAMMY AWARDS Los Angeles, California The Spanish flamenco pop singer performed and “El Mal Querer” won Best Latin Rock, Urban or Alternative Album

Monday, October 21, 2019 WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE LE POISSON ROUGE Greenwich Village, NYC – Venezuela, Berklee, Limón, IMG, and “Everybody Knows.” The 2019 Latin Grammy winner for Best New Artist is on her way…”Voy, Voy, Voy” – Sponsored by World Music Institute

Sunday, October 20, 2019 PURCHASE COLLEGE ARTS CENTER Purchase, NYC (White Plains) Javier Limón, the world’s best flamenco producer, brings “the best flamenco group in the world” – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Flamenco Legends: Paco de Lucía Project

Friday, October 18, 2019 DIGITAL RELEASE ~ LA-based guitarist Vahagni releases a compelling flamenco tribute to his late father, the first guitar soloist for the National Philharmonic Orchestra of Armenia

Continue Reading Vahagni’s ‘The Life and Death of a Great Matador’ tribute to a great guitarist

Sunday, October 13, 2019 WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE SYMPHONY SPACE Upper West Side, NYC Producer Javier Limón reassembled the last touring band of the greatest flamenco guitarist in history – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading The Paco de Lucía Project

Friday, November 22, 2019 THEATRE AT WESTBURY WESTBURY, Long Island The master at blending flamenco with rumba, tango and salsa. “Lágrimas Negras” – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Diego el Cigala

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 LINCOLN CENTER OUT OF DOORS Damrosch Park, Lincoln Center Charismatic Spanish flamenco dance star of the new generation brings one of his more personal shows to New York. Arooj Aftab opens with Sufi rock. – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Jesús Carmona

March, 4, 2016 THE TOWN HALL Midtown, NYC – Original Sponsor Carnegie Hall

Continue Reading Vicente Amigo’s “Tauromagia” is One of the Classic Flamenco Albums

NOHO; Sun, Mar 10, 2019; WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE, FLAMENCO FESTIVAL, Spanish Romani flamenco live music ~ His third album ‘Universo Pastora’ pays tribute to Pastora Pavón (La Niña de los Peines). – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Israel Fernandez sings Spanish flamenco at Joe’s Pub

Thursday-Sunday, March 7-10, 2019 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL NYC NEW YORK CITY CENTER Midtown, NYC Sara Baras, one of the world’s great flamenco dancers (really) plays with gender in the shadows of flamenco for her company’s 20th Anniversary – Sponsored by New York City Center

Continue Reading Flamenco Festival New York City Center 2019 Sara Baras ‘Sombras’

Friday, February 22, 2019 THE TOWN HALL Midtown, NYC “Greatest flamenco dancer of the century” (The New York Times) – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Friday-Sunday, January 18-20, 2019 JOYCE THEATER, NYC One of Cuba’s leading flamenco dance companies returns to New York – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Compañia Irene Rodríguez

Thursday-Saturday, March 22-24, 2018 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL DIZZY’S CLUB JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER Columbus Circle, NYC One of the great flamenco pianists plays a concert of “Flamenco Meets Jazz.” – Sponsored by ¡Jazz at Lincoln Center!

Saturday, March 17, 2018 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL NYC CARNEGIE HALL Midtown, NYC Carmen Linares, Marina Heredia, Arcángel with Ana Morales – Sponsored by Carnegie Hall

Continue Reading Andalusían Voices: Linares, Heredia, & Arcángel

Friday, March 16, 2018 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL ROULETTE Boerum Hill, Brooklyn From one of the great Spanish flamenco families, she built this show around the female poets of the Generation of 27 – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Wednesday, March 14, 2018 SCHIMMEL CENTER Financial District, NYC This really unique Spanish Flamenco singer blends in experimental rock, electronics and multimedia – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Niño de Elche 2018

Friday-Saturday, March 9-10, 2018 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL NEW YORK CITY CENTER Midtown, NYC Yerbabuena celebrates her company’s 20th anniversary with “Carne y Hueso” (Flesh and Bone) – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading Compañía Eva Yerbabuena

Saturday, March 3, 2018 FLAMENCO FESTIVAL ROULETTE Boerum Hill, Brooklyn One of the great Spanish contemporary Flamenco guitarists. – ¡New York Latin Culture Sponsor!

Continue Reading José Antonio Rodríguez

MIDTOWN, Fri-Sun, Mar 2-4, 2018 ~ The world’s premiere Flamenco dance company visits New York. # spanish flamenco festival dance

Continue Reading Ballet Nacional de España Flamenco Festival New York City Center

92nd Street Y Upper East Side, Manhattan Saturday, October 21, 2017

Continue Reading Paco Peña

LINCOLN SQUARE, Sat, Feb 11, 2017, WORLD MUSIC INSTITUTE, Spanish flamenco live music ~ The leading flamenco producer explores the Sephardic, Arabic, and Romani origins of Flamenco

Continue Reading Javier Limón

New York City Center Midtown Thursday-Saturday March 30 – April 1, 2017

Continue Reading Blanca Li and Maria Alexandrova “Goddesses & Demonesses”

Friday, February 17, 2017 SCHIMMEL CENTER Financial District, NYC The Spanish Flamenco Gitano star brings his “Latente: A Flamenco Journey” show

CUBA FESTIVAL Cuba’s leading Spanish Flamenco company. Joyce Theater Chelsea, Manhattan Thursday – Sunday May 19 – 22, 2016

Continue Reading Irene Rodríguez Compañía Cuba Festival at The Joyce

MIDTOWN, Mar 18, 2016 ~ A Flamenco of Arabic poetry by Spanish and Persian musicians. # persian spanish flamenco festival live music

Continue Reading Qasida Persian Spanish Flamenco Festival at Carnegie Hall

Armenian violinist from Lebanon living in Spain connects Flamenco to its ancient roots Le Poisson Rouge Flamenco Festival! Friday, March 18, 2016, 7:30pm

Flamenco is a Spanish art form with influences from many cultures. What became flamenco originated in Asia with the Romani people of Rajasthan in northwest India who were traveling court musicians. You can recognize the fiery flamenco hands in Indian classical dance.

The tradition absorbed many influences on the journey from India to Andalucía, the southern tip of Spain, and the very end of the European peninsula. Andalucía was the center of Islamic, Spain. You can hear the call to prayer in flamenco. Being only 9 miles from Africa, Andalucía absorbed African culture too. The “jaleo” dancing with wild abandon and feeding off the cheers of the audience is a form of African call and response. We don’t know if that element came from Africa or people just do the same things everywhere.

From Andalucía, proto-flamenco came to the Americas, absorbed American traditions in Cuba and Peru, absorbed jazz and made the round trip to Spain where these American traditions became standard flamenco.

NYC’s big flamenco celebration is the Flamenco Festival NYC in March. There is regularly flamenco tablao at New York City’s Spanish social clubs, La Nacional in Chelsea, Manhattan and Centro Español de Queens in Astoria, Queens.

Flamenco is one of the those things that proves that among humans, nothing is pure. We are mixes of one another.

Spaniards will tell you that flamenco is theirs, and it is, but it is really a blend of many cultures. Flamenco is a Spanish blend of Romani, Muslim, African, Jewish, Persian, Indian and even Cuban and Peruvian traditions.

The Romani people, traveling court musicians of northern India, carried their music to the end of the world, Andalusía. They absorbed many traditions along the way. You can hear the Muslim call to prayer in the music. The fiery hands of flamenco dancers have an obvious root in Indian temple dancing. I recognize flamenco hands from my childhood in Bangkok. Thai classical dancing also has an Indian root.

Columbus, conquistadors and then Spanish treasure galleons sailed to the New World from Andalusían ports. Romani people and their music came along.

In Cuba, the American end of the Spanish slaver/galleon route, flamenco guitar mixed with African drum into the spectrum of what we now call jazz and Latin music. That is why jazz and Latin music, even reggaeton, blends so well with flamenco. There is already a common root.

Cuban flamenco traditions also went back to Spain as cantes de ida y vuelta flamenco (round trip songs). The Cajon, the box drum that is now considered a standard flamenco instrument, is an Afro-Peruvian instrument that Spanish flamenco guitar legend Paco de Lucía brought back to Spain from a South American tour in the 1980s.

We are mixes of each other and have been migrating since we could walk. Those who claim purity are often setting you up to be robbed or abused. Don’t believe it. Anyway, the mix is what makes us beautiful.

The roots of Flamenco are medieval. The Romani people were traveling court musicians from northern India. Flamenco is originally, and in some ways still, a family tradition.

New York is a city of theaters and we have gotten used to seeing flamenco in theaters like New York City Center, the Joyce Theater and other venues. These are choreographed flamenco shows. The stage form of ópera flamenca begins around 1910.

In Andalusía, Spain’s southern province, you can see flamenco tablao in legendary bars. This is Tablao El Cardenal in Córdoba, Andalusía, Spain.

Flamenco families learned long ago that they could make a couple of bucks dancing for travelers in the local tavern. Flamenco tablao is improvised, though it is still a show.

The Golden Age of Flamenco (1869-1910) was in these bars or “cafés cantantes” (music cafés).

In New York there is flamenco tablao at La Nacional in Chelsea; Circulo Español in Astoria, Queens; and a few other places around town.

John Singer Sargent’s large painting “El Jaleo” (93 in x 138 in) from 1882 gets closer to home. Hispanic Society in Washington Heights, NYC has a smaller version “The Spanish Dance.”

Sargent made the painting after a trip through Spain and North Africa in 1879. Flamenco’s origins in Spain are many hundreds of years earlier, but we are closer to the root.

The artist may have had a stage in mind, but the room also looks like a cellar, a large space where a family could gather and make some noise without attracting unwanted attention. Romani are still today a marginalized people. In marginalized communities, you want to do your thing without drawing the authorities.

“Jaleo” means a ruckus, racket or pandemonium. To some of us that’s just a party. “Jaleo de Jerez” is a particular Spanish dance. “Jaleo” also refers to surprisingly complex form of flamenco clapping, stomping, clicking and shouting out support.

Back in the day there was no internet, television, radio or movies. Only large towns might have a theater. At the end of the day there was basically nothing to do. So after dinner families would get together and entertain themselves.

Dancing in front of your family is an expression of membership in the family, but also your individuality within the family. If you made your living as an entertainer, this was also a chance to practice. If your crush was visiting, dancing was an opportunity to show off without your parents getting mad at you. Children who heard these rhythms since the womb would dance for the delight and approval of family elders.

So this is how flamenco begins. It’s a family celebration that provided entertainment and passed family traditions to the young. The same type of thing occurs around the world and still does today.

Look at the dancer. She is dancing flamenco, but could be practicing her Balanchine ballet technique hands. She could be dancing Cuban rumba, Puerto Rican bomba or reggaeton. We do the same thing today when we jump out and dance inside a circle or two lines of dancers, just like they did on the Soul Train dance television show in the 1970s.

We found Sargent’s “El Jaleo” while searching for the meaning of El Jaleo in the classic Dominican merengue “Compadre Pedro Juan.” You can translate it literary, or as a call for a particular style of merengue, but what the singer really means is to dance freely, with abandon.

That is what flamenco is all about. It’s an invitation to both connect with your community, and lose yourself. So don’t just sit there. Show your stuff. Get up and baile el jaleo (dance the jaleo).

Leading brands sponsor New York Latin Culture Magazine including: Jazz at Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, New York City Center, Blue Note Entertainment and The City's own NYC & Company.

The project is led by Keith Widyolar, a marketing and communications consultant who builds brands and businesses through public, media and government relations. He was named a “key Hispanic journalist” and “Hispanic market influencer” by NYC & Company, New York City’s official branding and tourism agency.

The New York Stock Exchange had the team ring its closing bell for Hispanic Heritage Month. We can work for you too!

Copyright © 2012–2021 New York Latin Culture Magazine. All Rights Reserved. New York Latin Culture™ and New York Latin Culture Magazine™ are trademarks of Keith Widyolar. Other marks are the property of their respective holders.