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Spain
From copla and flamenco to Rosalía and Quevedo, seven decades of Spanish sound
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RosalíaRosalía is the most internationally acclaimed Spanish artist of her generation, a singer trained in flamenco who reinvented it for the global pop era. Her 2018 album El Mal Querer fused cante with trap, R&B, and avant-garde production to worldwide praise. She has won multiple Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards and collaborated with the biggest names in pop. Her work reframes Spanish tradition as cutting-edge global culture.
Spain's music runs on passion and reinvention. Andalusian copla and flamenco gave the country its dramatic heart through icons like Lola Flores, Paco de Lucía, and Camarón de la Isla, while balada stars like Julio Iglesias and Raphael conquered the world. After Franco, La Movida set 1980s Madrid alight with synth-pop, singer-songwriters like Serrat and Sabina became the nation's conscience, and rock and nuevo flamenco carved out new ground. Today artists like Rosalía, C. Tangana, and Quevedo take that heritage and reframe it as cutting-edge global pop.
Questions fréquentes
What is the most famous type of music from Spain?+
Flamenco is Spain's most iconic musical tradition, born in the Andalusian regions of the south from Romani, Moorish, and Spanish folk roots. It combines passionate singing (cante), virtuosic guitar, handclaps, and dance, and was recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010. Beyond flamenco, Spain has a rich pop, rock, and singer-songwriter tradition.
Who are the most important flamenco musicians in Spain?+
Guitarist Paco de Lucía and singer Camarón de la Isla are the two towering figures of modern flamenco, and their partnership transformed the art form. Enrique Morente pushed flamenco toward the avant-garde, while nuevo flamenco acts like Ketama and Niña Pastori brought it to pop audiences. More recently, Rosalía has reframed flamenco for the global pop era.
What was La Movida Madrileña?+
La Movida Madrileña was a countercultural explosion of music, art, and film that swept Madrid after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975. It celebrated newfound freedom with punk energy, synth-pop, and pop art, and defined the sound of 1980s Spain. Bands like Mecano, Radio Futura, and Alaska y Dinarama were among its most famous voices.
Who are the biggest Spanish pop and urban artists today?+
Rosalía is Spain's most acclaimed contemporary artist, blending flamenco with trap and global pop and winning multiple Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards. C. Tangana is another leading figure, fusing urban music with flamenco and bolero. In mainstream pop, Alejandro Sanz, David Bisbal, and Pablo Alborán remain major stars, while Bad Gyal leads the dancehall-influenced urbano scene.
Dernière révision : 2026-07
What languages do Spanish artists sing in?+
Most Spanish artists sing in Spanish (Castilian), the country's official language. However, several sing in Spain's co-official languages, especially Catalan, as heard in the work of Lluís Llach and parts of Joan Manuel Serrat's catalogue. This linguistic diversity is an important part of Spain's musical identity.
Sources & Références
- 1Flamenco: Passion, Politics and Popular Culture — William Washabaugh, 1996Livre
- 2Spain: A History in Music — BBC Music, 2021
- 3Rosalía: how a flamenco scholar became a global pop star — The Guardian, 2019
- 4La Movida: the wild youth culture that transformed Spain — BBC Culture, 2020
- 5Flamenco - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage — UNESCO, 2010
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À propos de cet article
This page is based on documented music history, artist biographies, chart data, award records, and cross-referenced sources from music journalism and academic research.
Curated by the timeline.music editorial team.