※ Preview may take some time.
※ Preview is not available for songs under copyright collective.
A valuable live version of Tiento's songs 1 and 2, as well as the escobilla (the part that shows off the dancer's foot technique). January 16, 2011, Nerima Cultural Center. Powerful and sophisticated zapateado (footsteps) that stands out. A guitar sound with instant power and improvisation. The dialogue between the highly original arrangement and traditional formal beauty is beautiful. Baile: Atsuko Miyamoto. Guitar: Katsuhiko Katagiri. Cante: Antonio Sanlúcar, Hiromitsu Obuchi.
Flamenco bailaora. Born in Osaka in 1971. She started playing the piano when she was a child, and when she was in high school, she belonged to a jazz band in Florida, USA, where she studied abroad. Started flamenco in a circle while attending the Department of Newspapers, Faculty of Letters, Sophia University (instructed by Hanae Sekiguchi). After graduating, while working as a magazine editor, studied under Sachiko Setta and Yumi Onimoto. After studying abroad in Spain for a short period in 1992 and 1995, she studied flamenco for a long time from 1998 to the end of 2000. Studied under Juana Amaya,Andres Marin, Beren Fernandez, La China, Calmera Greco, etc. After returning to Japan, she presided over Estudio ROMERO.
Katsuhiko Katagiri Flamenco guitarist. Born in Atami, Shizuoka Prefecture in 1966, raised in Tokyo. He started to play violin from a young age, and then he studied guitar alone. He formed Rock Group A-JARI in junior high school and won a contest sponsored by YAMAHA. After that he went through jazz guitar and studied folk music of the world at Meiji University Ebato Akira seminar. In addition, he started playing flamenco guitar while studying, and studied under Hideo Suzuki. In 1988, after studying abroad for a short period in Spain, he has been active in flamenco classes, theaters and tablaos, etc., mainly on dance accompaniment. Long-term study abroad in Spain in 1998. Studied with Miguel Angel Cortes, Paco Arriaga, etc. In addition to the local tablao and radio appearances, it has been well received by Jana Amaya's classroom accompaniment. After returning to Japan at the end of 2000, along with dance accompaniment, he has also put emphasis on teaching younger generations, co-starring with other genres and presides over Estudio ROMERO.
Estudio ROMERO