The mascletá correguda

Urban spaces at the origins of a tradition

The mascletá as we know it today seems to have its origin in an act of movement: the mascletá correguda or ‘runned mascletá’. In the mascletá correguda, long strings with fireworks (the so-called traca) are disposed along the streets of a village or neighbourhood. The fireworks are lit at one extreme and explode all along the way, allowing people to run under the exploding fireworks or along with it, ‘accompanying the fire’.

As the route could be quite long, in order to avoid monotony in the explosions, pyrotechnicians invented a new concept: to create rythm within the explosions using respectively stronger or weaker fireworks at certains points. And so the search for aesthetic enjoyment within the explosions was born.

The beginning and/or the end of the mascletá usually took place at the church square of the village or neighbourhood. Because of the traditional urbanism of these villages, the mascletá was developed in this way: a narrow run through the streets and a final apotheosis at the squares, being those the only places which would allow an important amount of fireworks.

This tradition developed through the years and led to the modern mascletás we can enjoy today at Valencia’s city hall square. Nevertheless, some villages –as the municipality of Godella does every summer– still hold mascletás corregudas as they once were. This video courtesy of Freakpyromaniacs (8′51”) serves as an excellent example of this tradition: streets taken over by a cloud of smoke and rythmic explosions that culminate in a symphony of thunder.


http://www.vimeo.com/2825229


Video courtesy of Freakpyromaniacs
www.freakpyromaniacs.com