Malagueña

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Malagueña is a woman living in the Spanish port city of Málaga, on the southern coast of Spain, in the province of Andalucia. In fact malagueña is simply the feminine form of the adjective malagueño/malagueña 'pertaining to Málaga'.

"Malagueña" is a piano composition and song by Ernesto Lecuona.

There is a[n unrelated?] piece [of the same name?] by the Spanish composer Isaac Albéniz.

Lecuona's Malagueña was originally the sixth movement of the Suite Andalucia by Lecuona. He also provided it with Spanish lyrics. It has since been provided with lyrics in several other languages. A German language version sung by Caterina Valente, with Werner Müller's Orchestra, was popular in the United States (not making the Billboard chart, but charting on Cash Box, peaking at position #42) in February 1955. English lyrics have been written by Marion Banks.

A later charting version was recorded by Connie Francis in 1960, and charted at #42 on Billboard as the flip side of her #1 pop smash "My Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own." Bill Holman's arrangement for the Stan Kenton Orchestra which appeared on the 1961 album Adventures in Jazz turned Malagueña from a flamenco genre piece into a fiery big band showpiece[1].

Over the years, Malagueña has been performed numerous times by the University of Massachusetts Amherst Marching Band, and as such, has become one of the songs most identified with the group [2]. The University of Minnesota hockey pep band also plays the song after each home win by their men's hockey team. The Madison Scouts Drum and Bugle Corps also often feature the song, and won their second Drum Corps International World championship with a program including the work. Other Corps to perform the piece include the Boston Crusaders, The Cadets and the Hawthorne Caballeros as well as the Hanover (PA) Lancers.

One of the most notable performances of this piece in recent years has been as part of the Broadway musical entitled Blast!. What began as the Star of Indiana Drum and Bugle Corps was transformed at the hands of their director James Mason over the course of six years into a theatrical production that took London by storm on its opening night. The show is a fusion of Corps style musical arrangments and field (stage) movements with traditional theatric elements to create an experience never before witnessed in the theatre.

Rock versions have included an instrumental version by Bill Haley & His Comets recorded live in Sweden in 1968 (it was a staple of their live shows in the 1960s and 1970s, usually performed by guitarist Nick Nastos).

An instrumental version by Ritchie Valens was released years after his death.

A surf instrumental version of Malagueña has been performed by the Trashmen and the Bambi Molesters, as well as in part of an arrangement of Misirlou by Dick Dale and others. The genealogy of this arrangement is not known.

Another instrumental version was provided by Brian Setzer in his "68' Comeback Special" album, "ignition".


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