Sing with a copla of five octosyllabic verses that generally rhyme in the first consonant, third and fifth, and which when sung are sometimes converted into six by repetition of one of the first two. It is from the group of Levante songs and, as the malagueña, takes its structure from fandango. Most experts attribute its creation to Don Antonio Chacón, que pudo basar su composición en la melodía de la malagueña y estuvo una larga temporada en Granada hacia 1890. It is sung freely and is accompanied by the guitar in B due to its high tessitura.. Great interpreters of this style have been Manuel Vallejo, Marchena, Enrique Morente or Naranjito de Triana.
Grains
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Sevilla
Málaga
Jaen
Huelva
Granada
Córdoba
A tourist and cultural vision of flamenco
The Guitar, last to join.
The history of flamenco with respect to its geographical distribution
The present and future of the genre. The Fourth Golden Key of Singing.
The festivals
Revaluation of flamenco. Third Golden Key of Singing
The Flamenco Opera
Flamenco in Madrid. The Pavón Cup. Second Golden Key of Singing
The contest that took place in 1922 in Granada
The great creators. The Golden Age. The Singing Cafes
Evolution. Hermetic Stage. First singers
Origin of the word “flamenco”
First written references
Musical background