Latest group walls

  • Sassy Hey Everyone! How are you??? I miss you all! I wish I could dance with you some Salsa-Rueda! Love, ...
  • Sassy Thank you guys! That's really nice of you! Love you and miss you all! XXX Caterina
  • Sassy Life is a dance, dance it with grace!!!
  • Sassy Dear Friends... Thanksgiving is coming up....so let's share our thanks! What are you thankful for?
  • Sassy Let's all wish Cati a happy brithday, Salsa Rueda Santa Cruz Style.... Con una bulla!!

Take Our Poll

How did you learn to dance Salsa?

Salsa Music and Dance History PDF Print E-mail

Dance like no one is watching!

Following information was compiled from various sources on the Internet

You can also order Music CD's, DVD's and Accessories through our Website using following links:

 

Latin Music at Amazon

Salsa Music & Dance Around the World

New York (USA)

Salsa Music

During the 1940s and 50s, Cuban musicians had a huge influence on the New York music scene.But once Fidel came to power, diplomatic relations fell apart between Cuba and the US. Cuban musicians could no longer travel to the United States and Cuban recordings received no air play time. So the Puerto Rican and NuYorican (New Yorkers of Puerto Rican descent) musicians took on The Big Apple single handed.

These days New York salsa has a distinctly Puerto Rican sound ‚ smooth, polished, classic salsa. It tends to follow the jazz structure, incorporating lengthy instrumental breaks to showcase the ability of particular musicians.

Leading musicians playing NewYorican Salsa:

  • Celia Cruz
  • Willie Colon
  • Eddie Palmeiri
  • The Spanish Harlem Orchestra
  • Jimmy Bosch

Salsa Dance

The high concentration of Puerto Ricans and NuYoricans in New York, means that the New York salsa dance style is strongly Puerto Rican influenced, with an emphasis on fast flash footwork.

But, there‚is also a strong Latin Hustle influence in New York salsa dancing. It looks like this is a byproduct of the disco craze, which was HUGE in The Big Apple in the late 70‚s and early 80‚s. Take another look at Saturday Night Fever when you get the chance.Tony Manero (John Travolta) is King of the Latin Hustle in the local Brooklyn discos.

When salsa started to move into the Manhatten based clubs in the late 80‚s, many ex-Hustle dancers brought their disco moves into their salsa.

The current New York salsa style is called Mambo or Salsa On 2. It‚s a blend of Puerto Rican salsa and Latin Hustle with the break on the second beat of the clave. New Yorkers are quite fanatical about Salsa On 2 - there‚s stacks of internet sites which debate the finer points of ‚Salsa On 1" and ‚Salsa On 2".Explore them if you dare.

Los Angeles (USA)

Salsa Music

LA doesn't have a distinctive salsa music style. Local bands adopt the Puerto Rican classics. Cuban salsa music isn't popular, as it doesn't work with the LA dance style.

Salsa Dance 

LA style salsa moves are designed to dazzle the spectator - exciting, sexy and flamboyant with lots of dips, spins and drops.

The dominant influences are from Puerto Rican salsa, Latin Ballroom and West Coast Swing.

The LA style "shines" have their roots in Latin Ballroom. Couples break away from each other in the middle of a dance to start "shining". Women will extend their arms to strike a pose, then play with stylised hip and hair movements.

Men's shines tend to focus on tricky footwork based on Puerto Rican style salsa.

The aerial work or‚ tricks‚ come from the West Coast Swing influence. LA style salsa dancers often develop highly choreographed cartwheel and flip routines into their movements.

Cuba

Salsa Music

The contemporary salsa sound coming out of Cuba is called‚ timba.  It's a fast tempo salsa with a strong afro-cuban influence. Songs will often follow a traditional rumba structure - start slow, break into a core salsa rhythm, then settle into a beautiful call and response vocal pattern.  The backing vocalists keep the standard response running while the lead vocalist improvises. Ahi Na Ma!

The other feature of cuban timba is that it often blends other rhythms into the breaks. Reggae, rap and hip hop have a huge following in Cuba, and the timba musicians love to play with those rhythms, and intertwine them into their salsa.

Cuban dancers have a lot of fun at these times - they’ll pull back from a close embrace and launch into rhythmic middle body shudders and amazing buttock trembles – all movements derived from afro-cuban rumba. 

Leading musicians playing Cuban Timba:

  • Los Van Van
  • Pupy Y Los Que Son Son
  • Maraca
  • Charanga Habanera
  • NG La Banda

Salsa Dance

Cubans call their salsa dance style 'casino'.

In the decadent days of Old Havana, all the action in town was going down at the Casinos. The gambling haunts had the money to bring in the big name bands, so that's where people would go to dance.

Come the revolution, the casinos were closed, and the people started to dance 'casino' style in the local community halls. The name stuck, so don't be confused when a Cuban invites you to go out dancing 'casino' you're off to the salsa club!!

Cuban style salsa differs from the north american salsa styles in that it is 'circular' rather than linear. The man constantly moves around the woman in a circular dynamic, checking her out and showing her off. Exhibala!


Salsa Rueda de Casino (Salsa Rueda) Dance

 

Rueda de Casino is the correct name in Spanish. "Casino Rueda" or "Salsa Rueda" are English versions of the correct name, due to the fact that the grammatical structure of English is a bit backwards from Spanish!

Rueda is a synchronised cuban group dance with constantly exchanging dance partners.

It started out in the 1950's at the Casino Deportivo in Havana. The people invented a new casino dance, using popular dance steps of the time, danced as a group in a circle or wheel.

In Cuba, the people used to get together in large halls, called 'Casinos' hence the name. Some say it started in Santiago de Cuba, others say it started in the famed Casino Deportivo in Havana, or the Casino de la Playa, I don’t know for sure, I wasn't there! When the casinos were closed, people still referred to the dance style by using the name of the places where people used to gather to do it: "casino" and the name stuck. Nowadays people refer to the music as "salsa" and the dance as "casino".

Casino itself has its roots in the 'Danz'n, as well as its derivative, the Son Afro-Cuban dances such as Guaguane the Mambo, a rhythm invented by Cachao in the world-famous Tropicana Club in Havana, in 1943, and popularized by Perez Prado in Mexico, and "Cha-cha-cha" invented by Enrique Jorre.

Rueda (as it is commonly called in Cuba) is a form of Casino danced in a round with 2 or more couples exchanging partners when one person calls out the turn names ("Rueda" is Spanish for 'Wheel' and 'Casino' is known outside of Cuba as 'Salsa').

In the old casinos, the rueda circle would only be limited by available space - sometimes as many as 100 couples would dance in the rueda circle !!

Modern rueda uses the same kinds of turns and steps you would normally use in ordinary salsa dancing. Each move has a name, which is called by the leader of the Rueda. Leaders execute the move and pass the follower around to the next leader in the circle. Calls come in quick succession, creating an exciting dynamic between the dancers.

The steps that are considered the 'core' steps are danced in a similar fashion around the world and are the basic ones. Some of them are: Al Medio, Abajo, Dile que No, Adios, Adios con Hermana, (called "La Prima" in Cuba and Europe) Echufe (or in Miami: Enchufla), etc. The names may vary somewhat, but those are pretty basic steps, and I’ve personally seen them danced in Cuba, as well as in Santiago, Chile; Denver, Colorado and even Positano, Italy!

What happens next is a result of dance in general being a fluid and ever-changing entity, not stagnant. Moves are invented locally that reflect cultural reality. In Chile you might find a step named 'Entel Chile', with a move that mocks someone talking on the phone, since Entel is the largest phone company in Chile. In Miami we have a step called 'Balsero', which imitates the movements of the waves ('Balsero' is someone who comes to the YUMA (USA) by 'balsa' or 'raft'). You won't find that move in Chile because nobody gets to Chile by raft!

While some of the moves are graceful and intricate, others are just plain funny, such as 'fly' where the guys slap their palms together over the girls' heads in a pretend fly-catcher move (as in "fly ball", not the kind that buzzes around your food!). After all, what is dancing all about if not to have fun with it?!


Colombia

Salsa Music

The hot salsa sound to come out of Colombia is Salsa Dura - Hard Salsa.

Colombian salsa is beautiful salsa for dancing and very popular among Wellington salsa dancers. It's got a fast rhythm and a wicked big brass sound, reminiscent of the glory days of cuban mambo.

Leading musicians playing Colombian Salsa:

  • Fruko Y Sus Tesos
  • Joe Arroyo Y La Verdad
  • Sonora Carruseles
  • Latin Brothers
  • Group Niche

Salsa Dance

If you've ever seen Colombians dance salsa, it's amazing - incredibly fast footwork and tight spins. Colombians dance salsa really really close,the bodies of the two dancers glued together - almost completely touching each other, from head to toe.

So why do they dance so close?

1. Coz the dance floors are so crowded, there's no space for large spins.
2.
The music's so fast that the footwork's gotta be fast and small.
3.
Coz that's how Colombian's like their salsa

 

West Africa

Salsa Music

We'e included a section on West African salsa coz it's so popular among Wellington salsa dancers. Whenever the DJ puts on an Africando track, the dance floor rocks!!

In the 1940s and 50s, afro-cuban rhythms were all the rage from the Ivory Coast to Benin, Senegal to The Congo. Senegalese soldiers fighting for France in World War II brought home recordings of the latest cuban bands playing in Paris.


The West Africans recognized something familiar in the music. The majority of the slaves transported to Cuba came from West Africa. These infectious new dance beats had their roots in the rhythms the slaves took to the New World.


Contemporary West African salsa is wild -
spacey electric guitar solos, swooping saxophone lines and wicked percussion. The musicians tend to use traditional west african percussion instruments in their salsa band line up, so you'll often hear the tama (talking drum) vibrating it's way through the tracks.

Vocals may be in spanish, but are more likely to be on local tribal languages such as Wolof or Mandinga.


Leading musicians playing West African Salsa:

  • Africando
  • Orchestra Baobab
  • Pape Fall
  • Ricardo Lemvo
  • Manu Dibango + Cuarteto Patria

Salsa Dance

Salsa West African style is called salsa mbalax. It's more african based than latin.

If you made it to Womad Taranaki 2003, then you would have been treated to a salsa mbalax dance spectacular, care of Cheik Lo's band from Senegal.

The band were playing a Wolof version of the cuban classic El Carretero. The tama player launched into a high energy afrobeat dance at one point, lifting his knees into the air. Then he hitched up his long flowing robe, crouched, gave the crowd a big smile, and rotated his hips provocatively down, down, down.


Vocals are based on call and response chant. The lead vocalist will often improvise and tell stories - what happened at the fish market last week, who the most gorgeous girl in the barrio is dating, and what’s gonna happen when he leaves for Miami next week.

The History of Salsa

Salsa is one of the most dynamic and important musical phenomena of the 1900's. In many Hispanic communities, it remains today the most popular style of dance music. Salsa represents a mix of Latin musical genres, but its primary component is Cuban dance music. The roots of salsa originated in Eastern Cuba early in the 1900s. There, Spanish and Afro-Cuban musical elements were combined, both in terms of rhythm and the instruments used. By mid-century, this music came to Havana where foreign influences were absorbed, particularly American jazz and popular music heard on the radio.

By the end of the l950s, many Cuban and Puerto Rican people including musicians had settled in the U.S., especially in New York. This created the environment where salsa music completed its development. "El Barrio" (Spanish Harlem) was the main place where this occurred. Many bands were formed; immigrants continued to make Afro-Caribbean music, but they adapted the sound to their new world. They were influenced especially by American jazz. Gradually in the 50s and 60s, salsa as we know it today was emerging. The most famous musicians of that time were Tito Puente, called the King of Mambo, and Celia Cruz, known as the Queen of Salsa.

The rise of salsa music is also tied closely to Fania Records which was founded in 1964 by the musician Johnny Pacheco and an Italian-American divorce lawyer named Jerry Masucci. The two met at a party in a NY hotel. They struck a deal to launch what became the most influential record label in Latin music's history. Fania was known as "the Latin Motown," with one huge hit after another becoming popular all over Latin America. Many artists became very famous with the promotion they received from the record label "La Fania." Fania Records remolded Cuban music into a sound more appropriate to Latin New York, and they called the sound "salsa." By he l970s salsa was becoming so popular that Fania's bands and artists were touring all over Latin America. This decade was the real "heyday" of salsa.

The type of salsa music that Fania promoted came to be referred to as "hard salsa." Then in the 80s, another style of salsa which was softer and more romantic was born, with artists like Gilberto Santa Rosa. Around this time, Latin musicians began to have an impact on mainstream U.S. music. Latin music was becoming trendy here and beginning to intrigue the rest of the world as well.

Both types of salsa remain popular today and with the popularity of the music, came the popularity of the dance.

 

History of 'Salsa Rueda' and what is 'Salsa Rueda'
 

History of 'Salsa Rueda'

In order to speak of the antecedents of the Rueda de Casino it is necessary to go back to the reign of Luis XIV in France where the first ballets appeared. As of that moment they instituted "ballets de corte". In order to have a good title it was necessary to know certain choreographies that were performed in the celebrations of the nobility. Clear examples: the Minuet and the Contradanzas.

In the XVIII century, with the presence of French fleets in the bay of Havana, the arrival of emigrants of Louisiana, New Orleans and fundamentally the French emigration coming from Haiti with the 1791 revolution produced the appearance in Cuba of the French Contradanzas and derived from this the Cuban Contradanza arises. The court of Luis XIV, the Creole aristocracy, Spanish and including the town interpreted the dance with pre-planned figures that all had to know and directed by a bastonero.

There have been contradiction between the informants of the place where casino fist appeared. Some say that it first appeared in the Spanish Casino, Grammar school of Havana, the Patricio Lumumba and others say in the Sport Casino; what is true is that it expanded throughout the capital.

Rueda de Casino takes its name from the club, 'El Casino Deportivo', where it originated. In the 1950s many great dancers gathered there for friendly competitions. They would practice all week to invent new moves and go to the club to show them off. Sooner or later they began to dance the moves together. In order to keep a distinction between one move and another, they began naming them and Rueda de Casino was born.

As a result of the Castro regime, many Cubans immigrated to the US, a large portion of which to the Miami area. With them they took their culture including various foods, music and dancing. Rueda de Casino began to slowly make its way into the Miami salsa community and in the late 1980s and early 1990s it experienced an enormous explosion of popularity. There it has been so embraced, that one is hard-pressed to find a nightclub in which Casino or Rueda is not danced.

Rueda de Casino became a national phenomenon after Rosendo, choreographer and dancer of the "Ballet de la Televisiƒn Cubana", presented it in the televising program Para Bailar in 1980.
This festive dance, which was brought to Miami by Cuban immigrants, took hold there in the l970s and l980s. From Miami, it spread first to major U.S. metropolitan centers with large Hispanic populations and eventually to other cities as well. The movie "Dance with Me" has a segment of rueda dancing which helped poplularize the dance in this country.
Salsa Casino has evolved in Miami to such an extent that a new and distinctly different style has emerged. Miami style.


What is 'Salsa Rueda'?

"Rueda" means wheel or circle. It is a type of salsa dancing done by a group in a circle, with partners being passed around.
This wildly popular dance was done everywhere in Cuba---in the streets, in parking lots, in clubs, in homes.
The moves to this dance are numerous and can be very complex. The dance is done by two or more couples who do the moves in synchrony. A member of the circle calls the moves for everyone to execute.

Each move has a name and most have hand signals since it is hard to hear in noisy nightclubs. Moves can be called in quick succession, and along with frequent partner exchanges, this creates a very dynamic and exciting atmosphere for everyone involved.
The group nature of the dance is unique and makes it quite social. A group consciousness develops to make the rueda work well---with everyone watching the leader for the calls. Dancers have to open up their sphere of awareness far beyond what is necessary for ordinary partner dancing.

Whether you are dancing or watching, it is thrilling when a rueda circle works well and flows smoothly!! Rueda can be done to any salsa music. It is best danced to music with a driving beat and no rhythm breaks. (Latin music often changes rhythm throughout one song, unlike American music.)

The timing of the dance is "quick, quick, slow"----exactly the same as salsa. The "slow" beat is twice as long as the "quicks." Hence there are 4 beats to a measure and the dancer steps on 3 of them. Note that salsa dancers can step on beats 1, 2 and 3 or on beats 2, 3, and 4.
The former pattern is called "dancing on 1" and the latter is called "dancing on 2," assuming that the first step is the rock step. Most Cubans dance on two, and some American dancers prefer the more relaxed feeling that dancing on two creates. However, some dancers prefer to dance on one since that is more consistent with an American approach to music, and the first beat is easier to find. Dancing on two is a little more musically difficult. Rueda in this country is generally danced on one. To the reader, this difference--which beat the dance pattern starts on---may seem like a small matter. But to serious "on 1" or "on 2" dancers, it is the stuff of endless discussion and debate!!

 

Holidays / No Class

Monday, January 18, 2010
Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Wednesday, Feb 3, 2010
to Monday, Feb 8, 2010

Chris & Jessica go to Brazil

Monday, Feb 15, 2010
President's Day

Monday, May 31, 2010
Memorial Day

Monday, July 5, 2010
Independence Day

Monday, July 19, 2010
to Tues., August 3, 2010

Chris & Jessica in Europe

Monday, September 6, 2010
Labor Day

Monday, October 11, 2010
Columbus Day

Hire us for your event!

Hire us for your next party or event!
Chose interactive fun and entertaining Salsa Rueda dance and/or exciting and sizzling Salsa Rueda performance for your next party or event!
Click here to see more!

Recognitions

2005 TV Special
Half hour show about SRSC and Salsa Rueda

2004 Calabash Award
Excellence in Ethnic Arts

2002 WE Carnival
Parade performance

Instructors Wanted

We are always seeking good and committed Salsa Rueda instructors in order to support our Salsa Rueda classes, performances and instructions.
If you are a Salsa Rueda instructor looking for work, please contact us.
RocketTheme Joomla Templates