The Festival de la Guitarra de Córdoba, for decades an international showcase that positioned the city as the epicenter of this instrument, is undergoing a period of reflection. While it remains a relevant event, a decrease in its ambition is perceived, moving from leading the cultural scene to maintaining a more modest profile.
The current programming offers quality names, but the presence of major international figures that once made every edition an unmissable event is missed. Criticism points to a cultural model that, instead of strengthening 'flagship' events like the Festival, favors private initiatives competing for the same resources and audience.
Economic investment is also a point of debate. Maintaining the prestige of one of Europe's most important specialized festivals requires a decisive commitment, strategic planning, and resources that go beyond considering it mere expenditure. Major cultural events need a clear strategy to endure.
“"I see it as terrible, and if it's the same authority, the same institution, I understand it even less."
In this context, the recent statements by Paco Peña, the festival's founder, are particularly relevant. Peña laments the loss of the human atmosphere that characterized the early editions and criticizes the overlap of other major musical events promoted by the same administration, which fragments the offering and dilutes the festival's impact.
The current challenge is not just to book renowned artists, but to recover the cultural project's own personality. This involves strengthening training, providing space for young talents, attracting international figures, and transforming Córdoba into a true guitar showcase, attracting new audiences and consolidating its legacy.
Córdoba possesses the heritage and tradition to lead this project, but it needs ambition and a political and budgetary commitment to match. Listening to figures like Paco Peña is an opportunity to revitalize an event that was a source of pride and a cultural benchmark.




