Manolo Caracol

Manuel Ortega Juárez. (Seville, Spain, 1909-Madrid, Spain 1973). Flamenco cantaor. He is descended of a long ancestry of gypsy flamenco artists including Enrique Ortega (father and son) or Curro Dulce, and he was possibly related to earlier ones like El Planeta or El Fillo. ...show more

Manuel Ortega Juárez. (Seville, Spain, 1909-Madrid, Spain 1973). Flamenco cantaor. He is descended of a long ancestry of gypsy flamenco artists including Enrique Ortega (father and son) or Curro Dulce, and he was possibly related to earlier ones like El Planeta or El Fillo.

In 1922 he was awarded the first prize (shared with El Tenazas) at the Concurso de Cante Jondo de Granada, organized by intellectuals like Manuel de Falla and Federico García Lorca. However, in the first stage of his career, he made a living singing mostly at private parties, which at the time, were, together with cafés, the usual stages for flamenco artists. During the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), he started touring with theatre companies as: owing to the war, private parties were difficult to find. This kind of theatre show, very common at the time (see ópera flamenca) was a musical with commonplace love stories set in Andalusian or gypsy context and their musical pieces were usually a mixture of Spanish popular song called copla andaluza or canción española.

In 1943, he met Lola Flores, with whom he started an intense professional and emotional relationship. They became the most popular artistic couple in Spain during the forties, spreading their fame even to several Spanish American countries. His most popular songs in the field of copla andaluza, which he used to call zambra, date from that time: songs like La salvaora and La niña de fuego became immensely famous in Spain. He also took part in several films such as Un caballero famoso (1942), Embrujo (1946), Jack el Negro (1950) and La niña de la venta (1950). ...show less

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