Sevilla is also Spain's second most important center for bullfighting , after Madrid. Its elegance, charm, and wealth are mostly based on food processing, shipbuilding, construction and a thriving tourist industry. The total refurbishment of the infrastructure boosted by the 1992 Expo.
The April Fair is particularly raucous, with flamenco dancers in colorful folk costumes lining the streets and daily bullfighting competitions. The fictional spirits of Carmen and Don Juan, who originated in Seville, are invoked for delirious fair-goers.
Outside Feria week, flamenco music is hard to find in Sevilla, with most venues offering tacky "shows" instead of the real thing. La Carbonería is an exception - a quirky bar north of Santa Cruz church which hosts sessions by local gypsy musicians most night of the week.
La marcha Nightlife in Sevilla, known for good reason as la marcha (marching), usually means an interminable tapas-bar crawl around Santa Cruz, followed by a session in a nightclub and a mass get-together at dawn in the Plaza San Salvador. Not for the fainthearted.
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