Tomatito

Tomatito

Tomatito in Moscow (November 13, 2010)
Background information
Birth name José Fernández Torres
Also known as Tomatito
Born (1958-08-20) August 20, 1958
Origin Barrio de Pescadería, Almería, Andalusia, Spain
Genres Flamenco, jazz
Occupation(s) Guitarist, composer
Instruments Guitar
Associated acts Camarón de la Isla, Paco de Lucía, Michel Camilo, Diego el Cigala, Luis Salinas, Duquende, Chano Domínguez
Website Tomatito.com

José Fernández Torres, known as Tomatito (born Almería, 1958), is a Spanish flamenco guitarist. Having started his career accompanying famed flamenco singer Camarón de la Isla (with Paco de Lucía), he has made a number of collaborative albums and six solo albums, two of which have won Latin Grammy Awards.

Biography

Beginnings, de la Isla

Torres grew up in a musical family, which included two guitar playing uncles: Niño Miguel, a flamenco guitarist, and Antonio, a professional guitarist.

Tomatito, who had been playing clubs in Andalusia, became a flamenco sensation when he was discovered by guitarist Paco de Lucía. He accompanied legendary flamenco singer Camarón de la Isla for two decades. With de Lucia and de la Isla he recorded four albums, and had a 1979 hit called "La Leyenda del Tiempo". Their album Paris 87 won a Latin Grammy for best flamenco album in 2000. Their partnership continued until Camarón's death in 1992.[1]

Later career

Tomatito's music blends traditional flamenco and jazz. On some albums, such as Barrio Negro, he experimented with Afro-Cuban and Brazilian Music. He has also worked with flamenco singers Duquende and Potito and pianist Chano Domínguez, among others. A collaboration with pianist Michel Camilo produced the albums Spain (2000), which won a Latin Grammy,[1] and Spain Again (2006).

Tomatito has produced six solo albums. His 2005 album Aguadulce won a Latin Grammy for best flamenco album, and in 2010 he won his second solo Latin Grammy for Sonanta Suite.[2]

His music for the film Vengo, directed by Tony Gatlif, won the César Award for Best Music Written for a Film in 2001.

Style and instruments

Tomatito incorporates elements of jazz in his style of flamenco; both, he says, "emerged as a response to discrimination, a cry of suffering, or the joy of liberation". Half of what he plays is improvised, he said. He frequently employs the Phrygian mode, and his favorite tuning is D, A, D, G, B♭, D.[1]

He plays guitars made by Manuel Reyes, and uses (and endorses) strings by Savarez.[1]

Discography

Solo albums

Singles

With de la Isla and Paco de Lucía

With de la Isla

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Cleveland, Barry (January 2014). "Gypsy Genome: Tomatito Reaffirms His Flamenco Essence on Soy Flamenco". Guitar Player.
  2. http://www.flamenco-world.com/noticias/tomatito15112010.htm
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