From Granada Caves and New York Clubs: The Collaboration of Flamenco Guitarist Pepe Habichuela & Jazz Bassist Dave Holland
Holland met Habichuela, the acclaimed scion of a deep-rooted Gypsy family from Granada, as part of a jazz- meets-flamenco pairing instigated by a Sevilla arts organization. It didn't take long, however, for Holland to realize the depth of connection he felt with his new collaborator, who, like Holland , had taught himself to play at a tender age. Holland picked up the ukulele as a boy in the Midlands, while thousands of miles away Habichuela practiced the guitar music he'd grown up hearing by sneaking up to the caves above his native city.
While realizing he'd met a musical soul mate, Holland also fell for flamenco culture. It struck him as he sat with Habichuela and his exuberant extended family at a party in Granada 's gypsy quarter, overlooking the Moorish castle, Al Hambra, after that first fateful encounter in Sevilla. "We had great flamenco music and food, a fire burning. It was a magical atmosphere, the culmination of everything," Holland recalls fondly.
This culture resonates with jazz in unexpected ways, reflecting the parallel journeys of Spain's Gypsy and America's African musicians out of oppression and toward dignity and beauty. "I think the significance of the music for the culture is similar," Holland reflects. "Jazz is one of the ways African American musicians were able to preserve their identity. It was a rallying point, much as flamenco is for the Gypsies."
Jazz and flamenco also share what Holland calls the "aural transmission of music," the passing down through direct experience of complex forms and techniques, its subtleties and drama. Holland dove into this hands-on approach with Habichuela, learning a new musical language and eschewing all thoughts of playing over Habichuela's parts or making mere fusion. I had no intention of putting Pepe in a jazz context and expecting him to play that way," Holland explains. "So for me the real joy of this was to get into Pepe's world and absorb that."
Though Habichuela served as Holland's teacher and guide through the filigree forest of flamenco's regional variations and multi-section structures, Holland also worked intensively to forge his own path, his own embrace of flamenco's distinct sound and spirit.
He felt his way forward in unique places, in the emotional power of great flamenco vocalists. Working with recordings and drawing on his years of experience and artistry, Holland carved out a striking role for his instrument-and foregrounded the lyrical beauty and soul of what is often thought of as just about dance and fire.
"On the taranta on the album ('Camaron'), I'm taking the role of the vocal with Pepe accompanying me. I had heard the great flamenco vocalist Camaron sing it, and I knew I had to live up to that. At the same time, I didn't want to stray too far while finding my own way."
"When we finally performed that taranta and when I got the olé from Pepe, I felt like I had graduated," Holland laughs. "Those olés aren't free."
"When Jocemi joined us, I felt I could bring in some of my music. Pepe is 100 percent flamenco. That's what he does, but Jocemi has a broad range of musical experiences and brought new possibilities to the group."
"I think fifteen or twenty years ago, I would not have been ready to do this project emotionally. I needed to reach this stage in my life to feel it," Holland notes. "When it came, I really was ready to receive it and respond to the emotion requirements of the music, keeping an open mind and letting things resonate."
"I can now say that we are two Gypsies," Habichuela chuckles, "or better yet, he is a Gypsy and I am almost an Englishman."
From: Rachel DiGregorio rachel@rockpaperscissors.biz
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