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| home / Magazine / Reviews / La guitarra flamenca de Rafael Riqueni | |||||
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Reviewed
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This is a great way to learn some very sophisticated guitar. The book and video put Rafael's highly developed style within our reach. The material is definitely for experienced players as it includes only Rafael's compositions (no basic rhythms). Each piece can be learned for performance, to pick up falsetas, or for analysis of modern approaches. The price may seem a bit steep to some, but the material contains a great amount of exciting ideas displayed in a well designed format. You could easily spend as much on two private lessons, and even non-players will enjoy seeing and hearing Rafael's performances.
The video comes with a large 130-page book including the transcriptions and an index to the video indicating the location of each falseta in minutes and seconds. There is also an introductory text, a glossary of terms and symbols, biographical information, and Rafael's many comments throughout the video. All of this appears in English, Spanish, French, and German. The video and audio quality are good, and there are close-ups of certain difficult moments. We see each piece played at performance speed, then Rafael goes over each part more slowly, offering advice on certain situations and techniques. In the performance sections, text appears on the screen to indicate each transcription. ("falseta 1," "ending," etc.) There are ten pieces here taken from several of his recordings:
The music is transcribed in standard and tablature. The latter indicates only the fret numbers on the appropriate line, lacking such details as time values and ligados (slurs). I found this to be a bit Spartan for my taste, but the standard notation is generally accurate and clearly laid out. Fingering and techniques are very well indicated by clear symbols. Some examples are arpegios, rasgueados, barring, glissando, arrastre (rake), golpe (tap), capirotazo (tap and strum), and rhythmic and normal muting. The brief introductory text limits itself to the meaning of the symbols, and offers little information on the execution of techniques. One bulería uses an unusual tuning of EADGAD, low to high, and it is transcribed according to the fingering on a normally tuned guitar. This means that, in this altered tuning, an A fretted at the twelfth fret, second string is written as a B. Logically, the tab is correctly noted. The authors mention that this is designed to facilitate the reading of the score, since you only have to retune and read the transcription as if you were playing in normal tuning. But this also means that the notation does not make musical sense. Although there are several pieces that use altered tunings, this solution is limited to the one bulería. Grace notes are used throughout, as opposed to full notation of left-hand adornments, but with the video tape all becomes clear. In the fandango, the tangos, and the bulerías, the rhythmic strumming between falsetas that constitutes the base of the playing style is neither transcribed nor reviewed slowly. This amounts to a small amount of the total, and is by no means a setback. However, it is another reason why this material is not suitable for beginners.
His vision of flamenco guitar is a combination of several things: thorough understanding of the many facets and long history of the flamenco guitar, very highly developed technique, deep knowledge of musical principles and how they are applied to the guitar, and a wide musical vocabulary. Rafael uses some very unorthodox chords and harmonies that some traditionalists will find shocking, but he rarely falls into excess with these modern devices. He also adds some unusual techniques like fast lines using the campanela technique (cross-picking), which involves substituting the fretted notes in a scale with open-string equivalents. He uses this in a very intelligent way, in order to get from point A to point B quickly and cleanly, rather than relying upon it for shock effect. To a certain extent, he seems to use this technique instead of picado, which is hardly found here. This in itself is a refreshing change, and the unusual situations he creates with the cross-picking make for some very intriguing guitar work. Rafael has built upon the skeletal form of each style and fleshed it out in new and exciting ways, but make no mistake: these compositions are absolutely coherent and never rely on novelty for its own sake. The music is beautiful and very technical; at the same time sensual and virtuosic. As with most players of his generation, the influence of Paco de Lucía is inevitable, but Rafael's music also has to do with Tárrega, Javier Molina, and Niño Ricardo. His playing is solidly flamenco, and he adorns this approach with highly refined technique, chording, and compositional skills, a synthesis of twentieth-century guitar.
On the fandango, tangos, bulerías, and rumba Rafael is accompanied by two percussionists that contribute with knuckle-rapping and clapping. Rafael plays his intricate arrangements with amazing ease and beautiful tone, and each piece seems to have been filmed in a single take.
As you can see, this material is for experienced players. Rafael's playing represents the acme of the venerable Andalusian guitar tradition. His playing is beautiful and precise, but at the same time very technical and full of surprises. The well designed book and video make it possible for experienced players to enter the complex world of modern flamenco guitar through the masterful compositions of one of the world's greatest guitarists. Norman Kliman
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