Salsa
is not easily defined. Who invented salsa? The Cubans,
Puerto Ricans? Salsa is a distillation of many Latin and
Afro-Caribbean dances. Each played a large part in its
evolution.
Salsa
is similar to Mambo in that both have a pattern of six
steps danced over eight counts of music. The dances share
many of the same moves. In Salsa, turns have become an
important feature, so the overall look and feel are quite
different form those of Mambo. Mambo moves generally forward
and backward, whereas, Salsa has more of a side to side
feel.
A
look at the origin of Salsa
By: Jaime Andrés Pretell
It
is not only Cuban; nevertheless we must give credit to
Cuba for the origin and ancestry of creation. It is here
where Contra-Danze (Country Dance) of England/France,
later called Danzón, which was brought by the French who
fled from Haiti, begins to mix itself with Rumbas of African
origin (Guaguanco, Colombia, Yambú). Add Són of the Cuban
people, which was a mixture of the Spanish troubadour
(sonero) and the African drumbeats and flavora and a partner
dance flowered to the beat of the clave.
This
syncretism also occurred in smaller degrees and with variations
in other countries like the Dominican Republic, Colombia,
Puerto Rico, among others. Bands of these countries took
their music to Mexico City in the era of the famous films
of that country (Perez Prado, most famous...). Shortly
after, a similar movement to New York occurred. In these
two cities, more promotion and syncretism occurred and
more commercial music was generated because there was
more investment. New York created the term "Salsa", but
it did not create the dance. The term became popular as
nickname to refer to a variety of different music, from
several countries of Hispanic influence: Rhumba, Són Montuno,
Guaracha, Mambo, Cha cha cha, Danzón, Són, Guguanco, Cubop,
Guajira, Charanga, Cumbia, Plena, Bomba, Festejo, Merengue,
among others. Many of these have maintained their individuality
and many were mixed creating "Salsa".
If
you are listening to today's Salsa, you are going to find
the base of són, and you are going to hear Cumbia, and
you are going to hear Guaracha. You will also hear some
old Merengue, built-in the rhythm of different songs.
You will hear many of the old styles somewhere within
the modern beats. Salsa varies from site to site. In New
York, for example, new instrumentalization and extra percussion
were added to some Colombian songs so that New Yorkers
- that dance mambo "on the two" - can feel comfortable
dancing to the rhythm and beat of the song, because the
original arrangement is not one they easily recognize.
This is called "finishing," to enter the local market.
This "finish" does not occur because the Colombian does
not play Salsa, but it does not play to the rhythm of
the Puerto Rican/Post-Cuban Salsa. I say Post-Cuban, because
the music of Cuba has evolved towards another new and
equally flavorful sound.
Then, as a tree, Salsa has many roots and many branches,
but one trunk that unites us all. The important thing
is that Salsa is played throughout the Hispanic world
and has received influences of many places within it.
It is of all of us and it is a sample of our flexibility
and evolution. If you think that a single place can take
the credit for the existence of Salsa, you are wrong.
And if you think that one style of dance is better, imagine
that the best dancer of a style, without his partner,
goes to dance with whomever he can find, in a club where
a different style predominates. He wouldn't look as good
as the locals. Each dancer is accustomed to dance his/her
own style. None is better, only different.