Gerry Hadden

Gerry Hadden

Gerry Hadden reports for The World from Europe. Based in Spain, Hadden's assignments have sent him to the northernmost village in Norway to the southern tip of Italy, and just about everywhere else in between.

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Barcelona’s Kitsch Crooners

Manolo Carrion hosts O'Barquiño's Saturday night Coplas, a gathering of singers of Spanish popular music who never quite became stars. But for a couple of hours on Saturday nights, before small group of adoring fans, they shine. The Copla and other traditional romantic music forms were popular up through the 1970s, when modern music sidelined them. (Photo: Gerry Hadden)

Manolo Carrion hosts O'Barquiño's Saturday night Coplas, a gathering of singers of Spanish popular music who never quite became stars. But for a couple of hours on Saturday nights, before small group of adoring fans, they shine. The Copla and other traditional romantic music forms were popular up through the 1970s, when modern music sidelined them. (Photo: Gerry Hadden)

Each Saturday night, in a small room above a working class bar in downtown Barcelona, a mostly elderly audience gets transported back in time, to the glory days of the copla and other forms of romantic Spanish popular music. Or, once popular that is. Hardly anyone sings this stuff today. But at Luis Diaz’s bar, O’Barquiño, the copla still rings clear.

Diaz is a stout fellow who likes to ply visitors with a liquor called Orujo. Then he drags you up upstairs into his time machine.

In a dimly lit room, a crowd of about thirty couples, most of them elderly, sits at tables. They drink sparkling wine and clap, their eyes glazed over with nostalgia. An elderly singer moves among them, dressed in a flamboyant green dress, wearing pancake makeup and bright plastic flowers in her hair.

Welcome to Saturday Night Coplas. This isn’t kitsch. It’s not ironic, or hip, like the comebacks of Tom Jones or Tony Bennett. It’s just ordinary folks enjoying music that’s fallen by the wayside in most of Spain.

Back in the 1970s and 80s, O’Barquiño’s fare was topping the Spanish charts, led by the diva Isabel Pantoja. But that era is over.

Downstairs at the bar during a break, O’Barquiño’s owner, Luis Diaz, said he missed those days. He started the coplas night because all the good popular clubs had shut down years ago. He called his copla night a humble stab at bringing back the old days, and making people feel at home.

“The people who sing are all talented,” he said, “but for some reason never made it to the big leagues. So we brought them here.”

Retired cook Paco Carmona is one of those minor leaguers.

“I never made a living as a singer,” he said. “First, you need a guardian angel working for you. To avoid going hungry, I spent my life working, at all kinds of jobs.”

But, he said, if someone called him for a show once in a while, he’d go sing.

On a recent night Carmona’s fans sang to him first. The tune? Happy Birthday. Then he took the mic, and sang as if this were Carnegie Hall.

Emceeing the show each Saturday night is Manolo Carrion, the closest thing O’Barquiño has to a real star. There’s a poster of him on the wall, looking about thirty years younger. Today, he’s got the same mustache and smile, and he’s added a reddish-brown toupee.

Carrion said the copla isn’t just about singing lyrics.

“A copla can capture the entire life of a person, in three minutes,” he said. “That’s very hard to do. All the way till death. And all the joy and suffering along the way. It’s poetry.”

But it is poetry that had its last hurrah a generation ago. Carrion lamented that all the great composers of Spanish popular music have died off, and no one has stepped up to fill their shoes. Although, he said, he keeps trying. He crushed his cigarette, and then took the stage…to belt out a song from his own repertoire.

And for a moment, before these adoring fans, you got the feeling he had made it, that this was the big leagues.



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Discussion

12 comments for “Barcelona’s Kitsch Crooners”

  • Tomas

    Ese articulo muestra una luz brillante en males tiempos en Espana. Se que hay muchas luces brillantes alli, pero no estan publicados como ese. Luis Diaz es un hombre bueno para trayendo las musicas viejas a los viejos en Barcelona. El proporciana la gente con musica buena, tiempos buenos, y momentos nostalgicos. Tambien, proporciana las personas que no podian “hacerlo grande” en el mundo una oportunidad a desempenar enfrente de un grupo largo. Todo en todo, pienso que Luis Diaz muestra que el es una persona bueno y que tiene un corazon bueno. Las coplas es un oportunidad para dos personas O una a hacer que no podia pero siempre queria.

  • Ana

    I think this is a great place, people can relive good music and it can make people feel young again. It could also bring that type of music back if younger people start going to the club as well.

  • Rosa

    Estoy de acuerdo de Tomas cuando él dice <>, porque es verdad. Luis Diaz es un buen persona porque él devuelva música por los viejos, y lo hacen sentir bueno. La música de la copla está muy nostalgica para los personas del O’Barquiño. Me gustaría la idea de Diaz porque Diaz está muy desinteresado.

  • JorgeD

    Es important recordar la musica vieja porque la musica ahora no tiene talento. No me gusta la musica popular ahora porque todo es “auto-tune” y tiene cosas malas. En el O’Barquino, las personas estan recuerdando la musica que tiene talento y es de las personas historias.

  • Isa

    I think that this is a good thing for all people young and old. It will be nostalgic for those that are old and for young people it can expose them to new music!

  • Natalia

    Me gusta la musica popular. Estes personas tienen mucho talento. Lamento que estes personas no puedan ser famoso cuando tienen mucho talento. Estoy de acuerdo con Jorge. Hay menos personas no tienen talento verdad. Es importante que la musica preserve para mantener la cultura.

  • felipem5816

    I take humor in the fact that this even an article. It almost seems that it’s a mystery to Americans that not all forms of music are “popular” amongst the whole population of a singular nation. As an example, let’s use America. You don’t see all the teenagers walking down the streets listening to Frank Sinatra on their iPods, do you? Perhaps a select few do (myself included) but not everybody does. I know my great aunts, who were alive for the Rat Pack era, still enjoy their albums to this day. So of course, Spaniards who were alive for the Copla are still going to enjoy the music of their youth and yes, perhaps some young people will enjoy it as well. But don’t expect it to become mainstream once again. If that’s the case, I’m dreading when ragtime becomes mainstream again.

  • PMG15

    I think that it’s great that Diaz has brought Copla back to Barcelona. For the older generation, it lets them listen to the music that they love live. I agree with Isa, this lets young people have the chance to go and listen to music from the older generation.

  • julia15

    I agree with Peter it is good for him to bring back Copla. As for josh’s comment I think that this article is good. It gives them a bigger variety of music to explore. I think this is a good article.

  • Carmen

    Yo acuerdo con Tomas. Me gusta Luis Diaz. Me gusta que es la esperanza de ayudar a otros con música. La gente que ayuda a tener la oportunidad de volver al pasado. Me gusta que este artículo es bueno y no tiene una parte mala como los demás artículos que leemos. Luis Diaz esta una persona que está ayudando a estas personas a recordar los buenos tiempos.

  • Carmen

    Yo acuerdo con Tomas. Me gusta Luis Diaz. Me gusta que es la esperanza de ayudar a otros con música. La gente que ayuda a tener la oportunidad de volver al pasado. Me gusta que este artículo es bueno y no tiene una parte mala como los demás artículos que leemos. Luis Diaz esta una persona que está ayudando a estas personas a recordar los buenos tiempos.

  • Stephanie Johnson

    Yo pienso que este un buen idea! Es importante que mantena la vida de musica antigua. Estoy seguro que las personas mayores gustan la musica de el pasado. Muchas personas quieren recordar la musica tambien. Es una parte de su cultura. Diaz guardado la copla.