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Flamenco in Paraguay with Alejo Jimenez (In Spanish)
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Today’s
Enlightening Entertainment
will be presented
in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
Greetings
kind and loving viewers.
Today, we would like
to introduce
one of Paraguay’s
accomplished musicians,
flamenco guitarist
Mr. Alejo Jimenez.
I think music for any person,
whatever job they have,
even as a hobby,
is very good.
It’s a healing element,
and touches feelings.
It moves feelings,
it moves a lot of things
inside ourselves
that are important
to discover somehow.
And art is a way
to discover that,
to know yourself.
Mr. Alejo Jimenez and
his group Almandaluz
perform the stirring music
called flamenco.
The flamenco genre,
which originated in Spain
and is popular worldwide,
was recognized in 2011
by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)
as a “Masterpiece
of the Oral and Intangible
Heritage of Humanity.”
Mr. Jimenez is
a multi-talented musician
and gifted composer
from Paraguay.
He has studied intensely
for the last 20 years
forms such as
classical guitar,
jazz harmony
and improvisation.
He has contributed greatly
to the Paraguayan
music scene with
his broad range of talents.
For example,
he produced a jazz album
for the band Cateura Trio,
played acoustic guitar
in the folk-rock band
The Secret,
and co-founded
an independent record label.
Mr. Jimenez has also
received special mention
for guitar accompaniment
in the form
of Spanish dance
at the International
Folk Dance festival.
Let’s listen to an interesting
solo performance now
from Mr. Jimenez,
a composition
called “Mangoty.”
When we asked
Mr. Jimenez
about his formative years,
we learned how music
has been with him
since an early age.
My career is, let’s say,
a lifelong story.
I started getting acquainted
with musical instruments
as a kid, somehow
as if they were toys.
Among these,
the most important was
a battery-powered piano.
That was
my favorite instrument
for the next years,
when in school
and what not.
I learned to play flute
offered as part of
the local curriculum.
So I was always
in some way
connected to instruments.
Until I decided
to become a musician.
That was, let's say, when
I was 15 or 16 years old.
From there,
I started to train
with different teachers
in different areas.
I studied
in the conservatory,
then came out
of the conservatory.
From that moment,
I was self-taught,
to learn the styles
I was interested in and
to study them alone really.
I had about three years
of classical guitar
with the teacher
Luz Maria Bobadilla,
whom you surely know.
Mr. Jimenez studied
at Paraguay’s National
Conservatory of Music
from 2002 to 2004.
There and after, he met
some of the best guitarists,
including
Ms. Luz Maria Bobadilla,
an award-winning guitarist
from Asunción, Paraguay.
She is internationally
known for
her beautiful renditions
of classical pieces.
I learned
a little flamenco guitar,
which was something
that I love.
And well, I started
to work with that.
Accompanying [flamenco]
dance in the academy,
to learning the style
and also at the same time
composing.
Composing in a style
I call hybrid because
I am the sum of styles
around me.
Paraguayan folklore,
Argentine folklore,
Brazilian music.
I look a lot for the evolution
of Paraguayan music.
So the way things are,
when you ask for something,
well, at some point,
the master arrives
from somewhere, really.
So, I met
a flamenco guitarist
who was over here.
And with him I began
to take the first classes.
Because flamenco has
a somewhat
specific technique,
somewhat specific as
the right hand mostly.
We asked Mr. Jimenez
about flamenco
in his country
and why flamenco
is so special to him.
Flamenco is
a very old style,
it has an emotional charge
for me.
It feels very intense.
The shows I've done
in the strict format
with dancers, with singers,
have this feature.
It is music
that comes from the earth
and is very intense
because of that,
so, I deeply respect it, as
I do the roots of all styles...
Well, Paraguayan
flamenco doesn’t exist;
it is an adaptation
that we are creating, it is
like a stylistic enrichment
of our music.
And I think at some point,
you will be able to speak
of a national flamenco.
In fact, the people who
brought flamenco here and
they took back our music,
they did that
with the guajira (genre),
with Colombian music.
Well, nowadays,
on the contrary, we brought
the flamenco here,
and we are mixing it
with our music, our
Central American music.
Mr. Alejo Jimenez’s
current flamenco group,
Almandaluz,
plays a warm fusion
of Spanish flamenco,
South American rhythms
and Paraguayan roots music,
much to the delight
of the audience.
Mr. Jimenez said
that he created the name
“Almandaluz”
while touring in Brazil
many years ago.
After being introduced
to flamenco and its artists,
he felt a deep connection
with the Andalusian
Roma people of Spain,
saying, “This name
is Alma Andaluza, which
means that deep inside
there is a bit of Andalusia
in my soul,
like Spanish genes
in my blood, and then
all that is our Guarani
(native Paraguayan) land.”
During our interview,
Mr. Jimenez
shared with us how
he gets inspiration to
compose his own pieces.
My main inspiration
for the compositions
of my songs are…
it is my own reality,
my own life.
My inspiration
is my reality, what I see,
what I hear, what I look at,
like a movie, books,
but more than anything,
the things I live.
Recently, a unique 24-part
TV documentary
called “Che Valle”
was released.
It highlights Paraguayan
culture and history
with professional native
musicians as the actors.
Almandaluz was honored
to contribute their song
“Isla Seca” (Dry Island)
to the soundtrack.
Let’s listen to
this sweet tune.
We also asked
Mr. Jimenez
the intriguing question
of music’s purpose in life.
What I like the most
as a musician is that
I feel very blessed by it,
to be able to
continue to play.
What music allows me to do
is to share ideas
with colleagues,
with people.
Music is a phenomenon
of communication.
Music is communication,
and if we can continue
to do that, we, the ones
who do it, will be happy.
It is to bring an idea
to people, to bring
an emotion to people.
I am happy
being a guitarist.
The guitar is
a people’s instrument,
easy to carry, easy to bring
and everyone knows it.
You are what you are,
we are here
and we do our best
with whatever we have.
Mr. Jimenez
has also extended
his musical efforts
to perform at
a charity benefit concert
in conjunction with
prominent rights group,
Amnesty International,
to aid a children’s hospital.
My greatest satisfaction
has been playing music
for different audiences
and being able to
reach different audiences.
You never know
who you have
in front of you.
It’s very different
with people
in an older audience,
they have one way to
see things about the songs.
A younger audience
has another way
of expressing.
That your music can be
liked by someone older
and can be liked
by a younger person,
that is so awesome.
Every time
that you play live,
or you make a song,
it’s like a commitment
with that song.
It’s like a plant which you
have to give attention to.
Where the attention goes,
the energy goes too,
and that then develops.
If you take out the attention,
then it stops there.
And through the years,
the truth is
that my satisfaction
is to be able to
work with music.
Thank God that
music has many fields
of application, right?
You can make
advertisements and
can also inspire people
with music.
It’s a very wide language,
so my satisfaction
is to be able to do that.
I have the chance to do it.
I’m surrounded
by very capable people,
friends, musicians
who are very capable.
And let’s say that
not seeing the horizon
or the end of the road
is the beauty of this.
It never ends, we will
always continue forward
and music will continue
to evolve and we with it.
And that’s it.
Thank you,
Mr. Alejo Jimenez,
for sharing this window
into your experiences
and the merging worlds
of flamenco
and Paraguayan culture.
May you and your group,
Almandaluz, continue
to touch Paraguay
and the world with your
musical gifts and love.
Magnificent viewers,
thank you for being
with us today on
Enlightening Entertainment.
Coming up is
Words of Wisdom,
after Noteworthy News.
May God bring you
bountiful blessings
and a fulfilling life.
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