Harris Center Announces The Paco De Lucia Project

By: Sep. 30, 2019
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Created by 10-time Latin Grammy winner Javier Limón, The Paco de Lucía Project reassembles the band that toured with the legendary guitarist for the last 10 years of his career, together with the sensational flamenco dancer Farruco, grandson of El Farruco. A longtime collaborator of de Lucía, Javier Limón honors de Lucía's legacy while paving a new path into flamenco's future. Paco was widely considered the world's premier flamenco guitarist, and The Project is a unique homage to him. "It seemed then that Paco de Lucía was reborn in our midst; that the second of his two lives had come to pass" (Latin Jazz Network).

The Paco de Lucia Project takes to the stage on Tuesday, October 22 at 7:30 pm. Tickets are $22-$48; Premium $52; Students with ID $11-$21. Tickets are available online at www.harriscenter.net or from the Harris Center Ticket Office at 916-608-6888 from 12 noon to 6 pm, Monday through Saturday, and two hours before show time. Parking is included in the price of the ticket. The Harris Center is located on the west side of Folsom Lake College campus in Folsom, CA, facing East Bidwell Street.

The legacies of great artists go well beyond particular masterpieces. In the case of guitarist and composer Paco de Lucía, his playing, his composing, the sound of his ensembles, his entire approach, marked a "before" and "after" in flamenco.

No group has taken up the challenges of that legacy with greater authority than The Paco de Lucía Project. In the 1980s, the guitarist, who had long-established his place in flamenco history, put together a sextet that incorporated jazz and global music elements and exploded flamenco conventions. About 20 years later, he assembled a second, younger group. Brimming with energy and technical brilliance, this second sextet both pushed and freed the master, suggesting tantalizing possibilities for the future. But Paco de Lucía died unexpectedly of a heart attack while on holiday in February 2014. He was 66.

That last ensemble, reconvened as The Paco de Lucía Project, is now on its second tour of North America, celebrating the release of The Paco de Lucía Project (Casalimón Records), a live CD documenting the sound of their inaugural tour. As good as that snapshot is, the sextet has continued to evolve while taking on the challenges of de Lucia´s legacy.

"That first experience of touring America, taking this music and Paco's name everywhere, thinking of him every day - it was magnificent," says guitarist Antonio Sánchez, the son of Paco's late older brother. "As we toured with this group, each concert was better than the one before. Luckily, we recorded the one in Miami and it's now a tribute to Paco."

The sextet features Sánchez on guitar; Alain Pérez on bass; Israel Suárez "Piraña," percussion; Antonio Serrano, harmonica; David de Jacoba, vocals, and flamenco dancer Antonio Fernández "Farruco" (a/k/a Farru). Except for de Jacoba, who joined later, this is the band captured on de Lucía's historic double CD Live in Spain 2010.

Grammy-winning producer and composer Javier Limón, a collaborator and personal friend of de Lucía, masterminded the reunion of the group and produced the CD as a celebration of the legendary guitarist.

"Paco created a new sound with his first group. But then, with this band, he arrived at a different sonority," says Limón. "And I kept thinking: why are we throwing away a sound that took so many years and so much work to create?"

"By the time he assembled the second sextet, Paco was at his peak. He was the wise old man, the master, and the players were all so young. It was a different dynamic," reflects Limón. "Alain Pérez is arguably the best Latin bass player of his generation. Antonio Serrano is the best jazz musician in Spain; and you have Piraña, whom Paco loved, the best percussionist in flamenco's history. And then you have Antonio, and David, and Farruco ... Each one of them is a soloist, a leader. This band is the best flamenco group in the world."

"I take carrying on Paco's music with great humility. It's a real challenge," said guitarist Sánchez, who joined his uncle's group as a second guitar in 2010. "The name is a burden only if you don´t study, if you don´t apply yourself and work. Working with this group is a huge responsibility, very demanding, but it also brings out a lot of love on my part - and no fear. On the contrary, I was eager to do this. It has been great to remember him every day in his music, but also it has been great to see how this group has evolved, matured."

"Every day we seem to be doing something different, and it's great fun, very enjoyable, and it brings us together," said Sánchez. "And we also started to realize that we can pay tribute to Paco with our own music. There will always be classics by Paco in the program, songs like "Zyryab" or a rumba like "El Cafetal," but now also some of our compositions, things we used to do with him in rehearsals but were never recorded. It's a chance to capture and bring back some of those little things we had with Paco, and it's beautiful."



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.

Vote Sponsor


Videos