Over the years
the Gipsy Kings - which hail from the gypsy community in Arles and
Montpelier in the south of France - has included singers and guitarists
from the Reyes (Canut, Nicolas, Pablo and Patchai) and Baliardo families
(Diego, Paco and Tonino). Lead singer Nicolas Reyes is the son of
famed Flamenco singer Jose Reyes, who, with Manitas de Plata, sold
millions of records in the 60's and 70's. The vigorous strumming of
multiple acoustic guitars and the passionate vocals of the Gipsy Kings
have best been defined by critics and fans as an exotic musical hybrid,
"rumba flamenca". There are no other examples of a non-English-speaking
band (the group speaks in the Gypsy dialect of Gitane) with such a
consistent winning streak in the US, where the group is the biggest-selling
French act ever. Ever since the 1987 release of the blockbuster single
"Bamboleo," from their platinum-plus debut album, the Gipsy
Kings have dominated the World Music charts and sold more than 13
million albums worldwide - more than 3 million in the United States
alone. The band captured the #1 spot on Billboard's World Music album
chart with the gold certified "Best of Gipsy Kings," which
remained on the chart for more than a year.
Albums including
the gold-certified "Mosaique," "Allegria", "Eeste
Mundo", "Gipsy Kings Live", "Love & Liberte,"
and "Tierra Gitana" have provided a steady fuel of hits
to Billboard's World Music, Latin, and Billboard Top 200 charts.
For several years running, the Gipsy Kings have been consistently
voted Billboard's #1 World Music Artist and #1 Latin Pop Artist
in the magazine's year-end awards. In addition, their song "Sin
Ella" from 1991's Este Mundo was chosen by Peter Weir for the
soundtrack to his 1993 film, "Fearless."
Two PBS specials,
released in 1996, contributd to the Gipsy Kings' ongoing success
story. A documentary, "Tierra Gitana" explores the band's
roots in gypsy culture and their rich family heritage in flamenco
music. Filmed in concert and in the Gypsy camps of Arles, "Tierra
Gitana" provides a glimpse at the vanishing lifestyle of a
vibrant and traditional people. The hour-long film was also released
as a home video in December of the same year. A second program,
filmed in performance at Washington DC's Wolf Trap, captures the
excitement of the band's live show in a 60-minute special.
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