Imagine picking up a guitar and finding out that you would rather have your fingers bleeding than stop practicing your chords. This is the case for Javier Jiménez, a native of Madrid, Spain, and the founder of Barrio Manouche, a Gypsy flamenco band composed of artists from different parts of the world.
Barrio Manouche ended their first mini-tour earlier this year in May and released their latest album, âDespierta,â on Nov. 1. The album is very different from the bandâs previous one, âAires de Cambio,â according to JimĂ©nez.
âWe like different things,â he said. âOne day you eat lentil soup, and another day you eat a salad, and yet another day you put vinegar on your food. Thatâs how we are with music; we like to try something new every day.â
âDespiertaâ consists of eight songs, six of them being original compositions. The band released the albumâs first single, âEl Joven,â in early March, and it is available now on the music streaming service Spotify.
Unlike âAires de Cambio,â which consists mostly of rhythms and beats, every song on âDespiertaâ has vocals. The band also changed its process of writing songs, bandmates worked on changing the rhythm section and decided what instruments to use.
Barrio Manouche is composed of six musiciansâAlex Zelnick, guitar; Cyril Guiraud, saxophone; Caxixi Gary Johnson, upright bass; Javi JimĂ©nez, guitar, vocals and palmas; Luis JimĂ©nez, cajĂłn, poetry, palmas and percussions; Magali Sanscartier, violin, vocals and Buffalo Drumâand includes dancers Fanny Ara and Emaye.
Having a big band means that everyone brings in new ideas, and besides having different languages, each of the bandmates have different musical backgrounds. Jiménez said that the diversity of Barrio Manouche allows their audience to follow each musician to their origin.
Barrio Manouche is in constant evolution, but the story of the band started four years ago with four musicians including JimĂ©nez, his brother, Luis JimĂ©nez, and guitarist Alex Zelnick, JimĂ©nezâs former student. Zelnick was learning how to play guitar with JimĂ©nez at the time, specifically gypsy jazz.

The four-member collaboration soon became a trio. By the summer of 2015, restaurants, music venues and bars were having a new flavor of jazz blasting over all the Bay Area.
The origins of the bandâs name came to JimĂ©nez during a Christmas gathering back in Spain.
âBecause we come from el barrio from Spain, it represents a lot of who we are so it represents our music,â JimĂ©nez said. âManoucheâ means gypsy jazz, and itâs one of the influences of the unique sound of the band.
JimĂ©nezâs passion for music was born from a solitary experience with acoustic guitar. When he was 12, his uncle gave him one, and he thanks his family for being musical.
âMy mother and father were a big influence on our musical culture,â he said.
Now an eight-piece ensemble, Barrio Manouche performs regularly in San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area, including a special performance at Stern Grove this past summer, Aug. 11. âWe donât necessarily choose the people we play with in the band by how they play⊠but their energy⊠we are lucky that these people are beautiful people and we connect with them in so many ways,â said JimĂ©nez.
Barrio Manoucheâs music has no electronic elements. Playing solely acoustic instruments allows the band to connect more with artists from all over the world, which only emphasizes the importance of the collaborative experience. JimĂ©nez said that if only one person would be creating music, it would be losing the essence of community and the social message about art.
âI think itâs beautiful to have a community of artists and sometimes we cry, sometimes we laugh, its life and thatâs life, said JimĂ©nez.
At the Chapel, a venue located in the Mission District, the room becomes sweaty and loud. The stage is crowded with musicians, and the dancer is stomping and bending and waving her hands in the air. Not only do the musicians collaborate through the sensory experience of playing the instruments; the venue is alive and one with music.
This is the type of energy the musicians of Barrio Manouche reverberate.
âI donât think we are trying to create something,â said Luis JimĂ©nez. âItâs more like we try to connect with the music itself, what we are trying to deliver a vibration or energy.â
Barrio Manoucheâs dream is to tour Latin America and to visit JimĂ©nezâs roots in Spain.
Barrio Manouche performs at Club Deluxe in San Francisco on Dec. 21, and The New Parish in Oakland on Jan. 23, 2020.

