Manolo Escobar
Spanish singer (1931–2013)
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⚡ Key Takeaways
- Don Manuel García Escobar MML (19 October 1931 – 24 October 2013), better known as Manolo Escobar , was a Spanish singer of Andalusian copla and other Spanish music.
- His popular songs include "El Porompompero" (1962), "Mi carro" (1969), "La minifalda", and "Y viva España".
- Early in Escobar's life, his father left the family tradition of farming to devote himself to hospitality and culture.
- Antonio gave the teacher room and board in exchange for teaching all of his children music.
- When he was 14, he moved from Almería to Barcelona with his brothers, working as an apprentice in various trades.
Don Manuel García Escobar MML (19 October 1931 – 24 October 2013), better known as Manolo Escobar, was a Spanish singer of Andalusian copla and other Spanish music. He was also an actor and performed in multiple musicals. His popular songs include "El Porompompero" (1962), "Mi carro" (1969), "La minifalda", and "Y viva España".
Biography
Manuel García Escobar was born to Antonio García and María del Carmen Escobar on 19 October 1931, the fifth of ten children. Early in Escobar's life, his father left the family tradition of farming to devote himself to hospitality and culture. Antonio then met a retired teacher who had lost his family in the Spanish Civil War. Antonio gave the teacher room and board in exchange for teaching all of his children music. Escobar started playing the flute and the piano in his early years.
When he was 14, he moved from Almería to Barcelona with his brothers, working as an apprentice in various trades. He began his career in show business between Badalona and Barcelona's red-light district (currently known as El Raval), with the group Manolo Escobar y sus guitarras (Manolo Escobar and his guitars). His brothers Salvador and Baldomero were also in the group. Later, when the group started to become successful, Juan Gabriel, another brother, joined. Juan Gabriel and sister, Maria José, would later write songs for the group.
In 1962, he rose to fame with Canciones del Maestro Solano, his debut in Madrid and Barcelona, and the premiere of the movie filmed in the town of Arcos de la Frontera (Cádiz): Los Guerrilleros.
Even after 1965, when the copla genre's popularity was in decline, Escobar topped record sales lists, and was one of the few artists who had his own company and show.
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