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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Guy Hedgecoe

Wilco’s Spanish honeymoon

November 7, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Has a rock band ever been as consistently lauded for its live performances as Wilco has by the Spanish press? “At times they seemed more adventurous than Radiohead, at others, as legendary as Bob Dylan and The Band; as fast and powerful as The E Street Band….” gushed Pablo Gil of El Mundo after the Chicago band’s November 1 concert at Madrid’s Circo Price. And Gil’s not the only gusher. In El País, Fernando Neira reported that “right now, one can’t imagine a more intense performance on a stage, no magic spell is as superlative as this.” Last year, a colleague of Neira’s on the same paper had told us: “It’s official: no one sounds better than Wilco.” And state broadcaster RTVE was at … [Read more...] about Wilco’s Spanish honeymoon

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Music Tagged With: Circo Price, El Mundo, RTVE, The Whole Love, Wilco, Wilco Circo Price, Wilco Spain, Wilco The Whole Love

The man who knew Fidel Castro, Warhol and Franco’s Spain

November 4, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

It’s over half a century since the artist Waldo Díaz-Balart left Cuba. On January 1, 1959, he was seeing the New Year in at Havana’s Tropicana nightclub with the son of President Andrés Rivero Aguero, when he heard the news that the Revolution had triumphed. The 27-year-old Díaz-Balart knew he had to leave the island. His father, Rafael, had been a minister in the Batista government and had already left for the United States. His situation was also uncomfortable for social reasons: his sister, Myrta, had been married to a young man called Fidel Castro. They divorced in 1955. “On the one hand the Balart family had been in power and on the other, my sister had been married to Fidel … [Read more...] about The man who knew Fidel Castro, Warhol and Franco’s Spain

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: andy warhol, Castro, castro cuba, castro spain, cuba, Cuban revolution, diaz-balart, Fidel Castro, Franco, franco's spain, news from spain, raul and fidel, Raul Castro, spain, spain cuba, spanish news, velvet underground, Waldo Diaz-Balart

Rajoy vs The Washington Post

October 31, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

Maybe it’s because of the condensed format, maybe because he was talking to a non-Spanish newspaper, or perhaps he was just in a particularly open mood, but Mariano Rajoy’s interview with the The Washington Post’s Lally Weymouth seemed unusually revealing. The Popular Party leader, now three weeks away from an apparently certain general election victory, was hardly expansive, but some of his answers were relatively bold for a politician who has made hiding his hand something of an art form. When asked whether he would go beyond Zapatero’s spending cuts, Rajoy is quite forthright:  Yes, there is no other way out. I am in favor of reducing all budget items. But the item I don’t want to … [Read more...] about Rajoy vs The Washington Post

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 11-M, 20-N, economy, elections, ETA, european union, March 11 2004, Partido Popular, Politics, popular party, PP, rajoy, rajoy washington post, recession, spain, spain economy, Spain elections, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish politics, terrorism, zapatero

How history will judge Zapatero

October 27, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 7 Comments

Zapatero: not feeling so lucky anymore...

Jordi Sevilla, a former minister in the government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, recalls how his then boss once told him about a massage he had enjoyed a few days after becoming prime minister. “The masseur was amazed at how little tension he had,” Sevilla said. “This guy had spent a week in La Moncloa (the prime minister’s residence) and that’s enough to leave anyone completely spent!” The anecdote, recounted to writer José García Abad, reflects a couple of popular, not entirely accurate, perceptions about Zapatero: that he is a detached, even cold politician, whose meteoric career has been driven purely by calculation; also that he is a featherweight who doesn’t understand the … [Read more...] about How history will judge Zapatero

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: austerity plan, Basque country, ETA, EU, eu crisis, eu debt, eu debt crisis, european union, Franco, gay marriage, historical memory law, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, march 11, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, spain economy, spain politics, spanish debt crisis, spanish economy, spanish politics, spanish socialist party, terrorism, zapatero, zapatero legacy

Wanted: absurdly rich tycoon to lend Spain’s La Liga intrigue

October 26, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

It was while perusing the scoreline of Sunday’s Manchester derby – in which a team of petrodollar-financed stars had trounced the English champions 6-1 - that my mind turned to La Liga. By a twist of fate, something akin to a parallel fixture had been played the day before in Spain, between Real Madrid and Málaga. Real Madrid, like Manchester United, was the big, established power, with a glittering history, a formidable manager and a team built on tradition, as well as money. Málaga was the Manchester City of the piece: a side with no trophies to boast of (at least in recent decades) but with oodles of money provided by a rich foreign owner – Abdullah bin Nasser Al-Thani of … [Read more...] about Wanted: absurdly rich tycoon to lend Spain’s La Liga intrigue

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, Champions League, football, Guardiola, José Mourinho, la liga, Liga, madrid, Mourinho, mourinho guardiola, real madrid barça, soccer, spain, Spain football, spanish football, Spanish soccer

The end of ETA violence offers Spain’s cynical politicos a fresh start

October 21, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

Another masked member of ETA speaking to a camera, another message to the Spanish government calling for talks and lamenting the deaths of fellow terrorists. And yet this time, it was different. ETA’s announcement on Thursday of the abandonment of its four-decade campaign of violence has been warmly welcomed by the Socialist government, by opposition leader Mariano Rajoy and by observers and analysts who have followed the Basque situation closely. Strangely though, the declaration sounds like only a small advance from previous announcements made by the group and which were widely dismissed as ploys or timid cop-outs. This week’s “definitive end” to the group’s “armed activity” follows … [Read more...] about The end of ETA violence offers Spain’s cynical politicos a fresh start

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 2006 ETA ceasefire, ETA, eta announcement, ETA ceasefire, eta terrorism, Mariano Rajoy, news from spain, spain, spain politics, spain terrorism, spanish news, spanish politics, zapatero

Spain’s greatest export: protest and outrage

October 16, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

El País newspaper’s decision to put its coverage of the October 15 (or “15-O”) global protests on its “National” pages, rather than in the “International” section may have looked at first glance like a heinous editing error, but it was in fact a telling decision. Spain’s own indignados protesters, who have been clamouring for economic and political change since May 15, are claiming the credit for the demonstrations held in around 1,000 cities and 80 countries worldwide at the weekend. This may sound fanciful, but, amazingly, it is close to the truth. When the indignados occupied Puerta del Sol in central Madrid during Spain’s local election campaign, it was clearly a new phenomenon for … [Read more...] about Spain’s greatest export: protest and outrage

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 15-m, 15-O, demonstrations, economy, indignados, madrid protests, October 15 unrest, protests, puerta del sol, spain, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spain protests, spanish politics

A social network headed for global dominance… or buy-out syndrome?

October 12, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

It receives 15 percent of all Spanish internet traffic, has 11.5 million users and its own mobile phone operator and for the last year has been under the ownership of a telecoms giant. Tuenti is the social network of choice for Spain’s teenagers and a major corporate presence that many believe is on the verge of expanding abroad and taking on Facebook in the world market. Tuenti’s figures do indeed make for impressive reading and this, no doubt, was what appealed to Telefonica when the company made its €70-million bid for the social networking site in 2010. Now, a year after the takeover, Tuenti is at a key phase in its development. And as it moves forward in the shadow of one of Europe’s … [Read more...] about A social network headed for global dominance… or buy-out syndrome?

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: enrique dans, internet, Latin America, London, news in spain, social network spain, spain, spain news, spanish news, tuenti, zaryn dentzel

Gibson’s undimmed passion for Lorca

October 3, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 3 Comments

I first met Ian Gibson in 2004. While walking through the Madrid barrio of Lavapiés, I had spotted a face that I remembered from the book flap of his biography of Federico García Lorca. Like a weak-kneed groupie, I followed him into a bar and confessed I was a fan of the biography as well as his exploration of the events that led up to Lorca’s death, El asesinato de García Lorca. Gibson, who lived in the area, graciously invited me to sit down and have a drink and I spent 10 hurried minutes with him. Seven years on, I meet Gibson at the same bar (his choice), but this time the interview has been arranged by phone and it coincides with a new edition of his Lorca biography in Spanish, … [Read more...] about Gibson’s undimmed passion for Lorca

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: Federico Garcia Lorca, Granada, Ian Gibson, LORCA, Lorca biography, spain, spain civil war, spain historical memory, spain news, spanish civil war, spanish news

Forget the Catalan ban, bullfighting was already in trouble

September 28, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 5 Comments

In Catalonia, the last bull has been killed by a matador’s sword. In January, a ban on bullfighting takes effect in the region and Sunday’s corrida in La Monumental bullring was the last of the season, and, probably, the last ever. There is still the possibility that an appeal against the ban will flourish, although a ruling is still a long way off, but fans and opponents of bullfighting behaved as if Sunday marked the end of an era. The Catalan ruling is indeed a landmark, although a ban has been in place in the Canary Islands for two decades. However, given the tangle of regional politics that lay behind Catalonia’s decision, it seems unlikely there will be a rash of similar bans … [Read more...] about Forget the Catalan ban, bullfighting was already in trouble

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: animal rights, bullfighting, bullfighting ban, catalan bullfighting ban, catalonia, corrida, jose tomas, La Monumental, tradition

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