I’m going to make myself very unpopular with my flamenco dancer friends – because I don’t think flamenco dancing, as it exists today, can really be called a Spanish folk dance.
The video above shows a Spanish folk dance – compare it with the flamenco clip below:
It seems far more likely that flamenco comes from somewhere else altogether. We speculate about it’s being a gypsy dance, having traveled from the far east with the Romanies rather than being innately Spanish, but the fact is that we really don’t know – although the clip below does show some startling similiaries with Indian dance.
One problem with flamenco dance is the fact we have no proof that it’s ancient at all: the first records of flamenco dance (as opposed to flamenco music) don’t start to appear till the late nineteenth century!
Personally, I think it’s no coincidence that flamenco developed in the part of Spain occupied by the Moors (Arabs) for hundreds of years. No one could miss the plaintive Moorish influence in the music. Flamenco is much more likely, in my view, to be a melange of many influences. And the dance which started appearing in theatres in the 1890′s may have been so stylised that it may bear little resemblance to whatever was danced in the gypsy encampments.
