Tino di Geraldo
Tino di Geraldo (born Faustino Fernández Fernández in 1960) is a French-Spanish percussionist, tabla player, drummer, and producer. He is one of Spain's leading flamenco and jazz percussionists, bringing classical and jazz influences to flamenco ,[ 1] with a punk-rock background.[ 2] Billboard cited him as an "eminent flamenco musician".
Biography
The son of an Asturian couple, Geraldo was born in Toulouse and spent his childhood in France.[ 3] He gained a background in classical and jazz percussion[ 1] before he got his start in flamenco as a young man in Madrid , having met Diego Carrasco who needed a percussionist.[ 4] He has worked with some of the biggest names in flamenco and Latin music including Paco de Lucía ,[ 5] Tomatito ,[ 6] Chano Domínguez ,[ 7] Carlos Núñez ,[ 8] Raimundo Amador ,[ 9] Javier Álvarez ,[ 10] Niña Pastori ,[ 11] and Manolo Sanlúcar .[ 12] [ 4] He has also worked with musicians outside Spain, and has worked with French/Vietnamese jazz guitarist Nguyen Le and American folk musician Jackson Browne , featuring on and producing for his fourth live album Love Is Strange: En Vivo Con Tino and on the song "These Days ",[ 13] touring with him since 2006. He featured on Paco de Lucia's 1998 album Luzia .
Geraldo formed a group with Carles Benavent and Jorge Pardo , both of which also performed with Paco de Lucia and toured in 1998 and again in 2007–8.[ 14] Geraldo played percussion on Pardo's 2332 album, and Moraíto 's Aire album.[ 15] Geraldo's 2003 album Tino , took three years to complete and had only one flamenco track.[ 16] Billboard cited him in 1996 as an "eminent flamenco musician".[ 17] He has produced albums for Luz Casal , Carrasco, Elbicho , Jazzpaña, and Tomasito .[ 18]
References
^ a b Martinez, Emma (24 February 2011). Flamenco: All You Wanted to Know . Mel Bay Publications. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-60974-470-0 .
^ Stereophile . Stereophile. 1995. p. 287. Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
^ "Tino di Geraldo" , Flamenco-world.com. Retrieved 29 June 2013.
^ a b Olivo, Silvia Calado (October 2003). "A percussionist of reference" . Madrid: Flamenco World. Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
^ Balbuena, Rafa (29 July 2010). "Tocar con Paco en Avilés fue un lujo" . El Comercio. Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ "Tomatito Soy flamenco" . Flamenco Is Time. Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ Calado, Silvia (29 August 2007). "The (real) tribute" . flamenco-world.com . Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ "Os Amores Libres CD" . CD Universe. Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ "Biografia Tino Di Geraldo" . queca.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ Calado Olivo, Silvia (October 2003). "Entrevista a Tino di Geraldo, percusionista y productor: "El pellizco no es patrimonio flamenco" " . decajonflamenco.com (in Spanish).
^ "Niña Pastori launches her fourth album 'María' " . Flamenco-world.com . Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ Calado Olivo, Silvia (2 October 2002). "Sville's Bienal De Flamenco 2002. 'Medea' " . flamenco-world.com . Retrieved 18 July 2013 .
^ "Love Is Strange: En Vivo Con Tino" . AllMusic . Retrieved 29 June 2013 .
^ "Arles Benavent – Tino di Geraldo – Jorge Pardo" . Klink.org. Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
^ Steingress, Gerhard (2002). Songs of the Minotaur: Hybridity and Popular Music in the Era of Globalization : a Comparative Analysis of Rebetika, Tango, Rai, Flamenco, Sardana, and English Urban Folk . LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 195 , 202–. ISBN 978-3-8258-6363-0 .
^ Olivo, Silvia Calado Olivo (October 2003). " 'Tino', The Free Album" . Madrid: Flamenco World. Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
^ Billboard . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 27 July 1996. p. 64 . ISSN 0006-2510 . Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
^ Olivo, Silvia Calado (October 2003). "To the avant-garde of production" . Madrid: Flamenco World. Retrieved 24 June 2013 .
International National Artists