- His name is synonymous with poetry sung in Spain and Latin America. It takes more than 30 years delighting audiences with songs about life, love, disappointments and dreams of his 15 albums. Joaquín Sabina But he flees to the word "set" and says it still expects to record the best album of his life.
"Sacred is a word very religious, with which I identify myself," he said Monday in a telephone interview from Madrid The Associated Press. "I've always done what I thought I should do. Always the results were beyond my dreams, "said Spanish singer, and immediately said he was referring to artistic success, not the fame or related to the economic aspect.
"I still hope to make the best album of my life," said Sabina, whose words were flowing at full speed. The musician will come in late May for the first time the United States in its three decades of career, as part of a tour of three concerts that offered in New York, Miami and Los Angeles.
The author of "And they gave us the ten" and "Black Sox" do not know exactly why ever got to a stage in this country, but says he is "very happy" about the tour "The penultimate train" that will provide from 25 May. After having performed almost exclusively in his native Spain and Latin America, Sabina said the U.S.
will bring a different concert, full of memorable songs that will allow to involve the public. Only three of the tunes that will offer their latest album "Vinegar and roses," said the artist of 62 years, he recorded his first album, "Inventory", in late 1970. The rest are songs "more coreables" he said.
Four years passed without Sabina record a new album. Then, in late 2009 appeared "Vinegar and roses." Will we have to wait another four years before recording the next album? "No," replied the Spanish singer, who was exiled in London in 1970 during the regime of General Francisco Franco.
His next album will be released in Spain before Christmas and will include songs "very very romantic" love and hate, "very intimate and very intense." But also take some "cry of desperation" related primarily to the crisis we are living in Arab countries. On this disc yet to take, considering the best of his life, said he "would have to have an irresistible intensity, a drop of pain, anger and drop a few drops of poetry." Sabina, who at 14 wrote his first poems and formed his first band, said he feels privileged to get to a stage.
"It's a miracle, is a luxury that we have given the pagan gods and try to live according with it, "he said. And while it sure looks as singing in front of thousands of people, sometimes quite a few minutes meditating before a concert. "Every day that I get to the stage 10 minutes before I go home and not have to face that wonderful and fierce trial of those who have paid their entry and they will see me, "he confessed.
"Sacred is a word very religious, with which I identify myself," he said Monday in a telephone interview from Madrid The Associated Press. "I've always done what I thought I should do. Always the results were beyond my dreams, "said Spanish singer, and immediately said he was referring to artistic success, not the fame or related to the economic aspect.
"I still hope to make the best album of my life," said Sabina, whose words were flowing at full speed. The musician will come in late May for the first time the United States in its three decades of career, as part of a tour of three concerts that offered in New York, Miami and Los Angeles.
The author of "And they gave us the ten" and "Black Sox" do not know exactly why ever got to a stage in this country, but says he is "very happy" about the tour "The penultimate train" that will provide from 25 May. After having performed almost exclusively in his native Spain and Latin America, Sabina said the U.S.
will bring a different concert, full of memorable songs that will allow to involve the public. Only three of the tunes that will offer their latest album "Vinegar and roses," said the artist of 62 years, he recorded his first album, "Inventory", in late 1970. The rest are songs "more coreables" he said.
Four years passed without Sabina record a new album. Then, in late 2009 appeared "Vinegar and roses." Will we have to wait another four years before recording the next album? "No," replied the Spanish singer, who was exiled in London in 1970 during the regime of General Francisco Franco.
His next album will be released in Spain before Christmas and will include songs "very very romantic" love and hate, "very intimate and very intense." But also take some "cry of desperation" related primarily to the crisis we are living in Arab countries. On this disc yet to take, considering the best of his life, said he "would have to have an irresistible intensity, a drop of pain, anger and drop a few drops of poetry." Sabina, who at 14 wrote his first poems and formed his first band, said he feels privileged to get to a stage.
"It's a miracle, is a luxury that we have given the pagan gods and try to live according with it, "he said. And while it sure looks as singing in front of thousands of people, sometimes quite a few minutes meditating before a concert. "Every day that I get to the stage 10 minutes before I go home and not have to face that wonderful and fierce trial of those who have paid their entry and they will see me, "he confessed.
No comments:
Post a Comment