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New website for British flamenco lovers on International Flamenco Day

Today, on the UNESCO-recognized International Flamenco Day (16th November), a new website has been launched that aims to help hundreds of thousands of people who love the flamenco art form but, as they live outside of Spain, struggle to find teachers and suppliers near to them. 

While flamenco is intrinsically linked to Andalusia, the art form is becoming increasingly popular around the world, especially in Japan, Mexico, USA, Canada, Germany and the UK. However, practitioners and fans living outside Spain often have difficulty finding reliable information about instructors, suppliers, and the art form itself. 

The website FlamencoFinder.com was created to centralize these resources, positioning itself as the premier global hub for the flamenco community outside of Spain. It signposts online teachers and dance schools, learning resources, online and physical stores, and artisans around the world. It also lists all the tablaos (flamenco show venues) in Spain and around the world in cities like Tokyo, London, New York and Sydney. 

Flamenco is popular for its emotional intensity, rhythmic complexity, personal expression, and the freedom of performance which is usually improvised. For countries like Japan, which has the largest flamenco student population outside of Spain, the art form is particularly revered for its cultural exoticism, which contrasts sharply with many East Asian cultural norms. 

Emma Radcliffe, founder of Flamenco Finder commented: “When I first started to learn flamenco dancing, it was incredibly hard to find anything because all of the main resources are written in Spanish, and they’re about places and resources in Spain. I had to ask around fellow dancers and get tips from them. Even internet searches weren’t that fruitful, as you have to know what to search for, and when you do find sites to buy from, the shipping and customs costs can be eyewatering. 

“Having been to the Jerez international flamenco festival and met dancers, guitarists, singers and percussionists from all over the world who had the same problem as me in finding teachers and suppliers, I realised that we all needed a solution. So, I created the website that I wished existed when I first started learning to dance flamenco. 

“When I approached dance instructors in Spain who teach flamenco online in English, they were thrilled that there was finally a way for aspiring dancers around the world to find them.”

 

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