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Since 1970 Paco Peña has performed regularly with his own hand-picked company of dancers, guitarists and singers in a succession of groundbreaking shows. The Paco Peña Flamenco Dance Company has taken flamenco into the realm of music-theatre with regular seasons in
London
(Royal Festival Hall, Sadler’s Wells Theatre and Barbican) and festival appearances in
Edinburgh
,
Adelaide
,
Amsterdam
,
Athens
,
Israel
,
Istanbul
,
Singapore
and
Hong Kong
. 1999 brought the most ambitious production yet: Musa Gitana. Peña based the piece on the life and work of another artist from Córdoba, the painter Julio Romero de Torres. Its seven-week season at the Peacock Theatre in
London
”s
West End
stands as the longest-ever run of a flamenco show and a further
London
season followed in Spring 2001.
Another landmark was Misa Flamenca, a 1991 setting of the Mass that juxtaposed Peña’s company with a classical choir. Its premiere at
London
’s Royal Festival Hall, given with the Choir of the
Academy
of
St Martin-in-the-Fields
, was followed by a staging at the 1992 EXPO in
Seville
. Misa Flamenca has also been seen in
Australia
,
New Zealand
,
Poland
,
Germany
, the
Netherlands
,
Belgium
and the
USA
.
Paco Peña’s latest work, Flamenco Requiem, which again marrying flamenco with forms of classical music, came about following his participation in various music festivals, over many years, performing Misa Flamenca. The Salisbury Festival, finally convinced him to write a Requiem in 2004, true to the orthodox tradition of such works, but giving it a different treatment at the same time; thus, composing a REQUIEM FOR THE EARTH, building its context with this in mind, and therefore giving this work a social commentary.
Paco Peña is based in
London
, but still spends a significant part of the year in his native Andalucía. In 1997 he was proud to be named Oficial de la Cruz de la Orden del Merito Civil, an honour bestowed by King Juan Carlos of
Spain
.
Flamenco Notes
Notes by Paco Peña
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