Pepe Marchena

Pepe Marchena
From left to right: Juanito Valderrama, Juan el de la Vara and Pepe Marchena.
From left to right: Juanito Valderrama, Juan el de la Vara and Pepe Marchena.
Background information
Birth nameJosé Tejada Martín
Also known asPepe Marchena
Born(1903-11-07)November 7, 1903
Marchena, Seville Province, Andalusia, Spain
DiedDecember 4, 1976(1976-12-04) (aged 73)
Seville, Andalusia, Spain
GenresFlamenco, Andalusian copla
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, actor
Years active1910s–1970s

José Tejada Marín (November 7, 1903 – December 4, 1976), known as Pepe Marchena and also as Niño de Marchena in the first years of his career, was a Spanish flamenco singer who achieved great success in the ópera flamenca period (1922–1956). Influenced by singers like Antonio Chacón, he carried to the extreme the tendency to a more mellow and ornamented style of flamenco singing. Owing to his particular vocal conditions and singing style, he excelled mainly in palos (styles) like fandangos, cantes de ida y vuelta and cantes libres, contributing to making them the most popular flamenco styles in the era of the ópera flamenca, and created a new cante de ida y vuelta, the colombiana,[1] later recorded by many other artists like El Lebrijano or Enrique Morente. He was also the first flamenco singer to use an orchestra to accompany flamenco singing, though later he returned to the guitar.[2]

Marchena also revolutionized the public image of the flamenco singer: he was the first to sing standing on the stage (instead of sitting on a chair as had always been usual in flamenco), and often wore unusual outfits, such as riding clothes.[2] Both his singing style and public attitudes were widely imitated at the time, to the extent that the period has often been identified as the era of marchenismo. He was the first real popular star of flamenco singing. Until he appeared in the flamenco scene, flamenco was restricted to small venues and theatres, whereas he could attract the masses to fill large theatres and even bullrings.

  1. ^ D'Averc, Alexandre. "Pepe Marchena. Prophet and heretic". Flamenco-world.com. Archived from the original on November 25, 2006. Retrieved November 28, 2006.
  2. ^ a b Álvarez Caballero, Ángel: Introductory leaflet to Un monumento al cante, Quejío collection, EMI, 1997