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Cuban music ..........................
The Caribbean cinquillo found its way into the danza and the habanera (cubana) via the contradanza criolla in the nineteenth century. The habanera made its way to Argentina to become a precursor to the tango. The danza evolved into the danzon later that same century, becoming one of the two most important music and dance forms to influence Latin music of the twentieth century.
Rebeca Mauleon describes the danzon structure most accurately in "Salsa Guidebook for Piano and Ensemble" (1993), and hints at the future significance of the other form - the son:
"The danzon form consists of an introduction called the paseo (A), the principal flute melody (B), a repeat of the introduction (A), the violin trio (C). Innovations by several composers led to the addition of a fourth section (D) called nuevo ritmo, later known as mambo. This section added elements of the Cuban son…"
Dances to these forms ceased being group activities and came to be performed as individual couples. There were two major reasons for this: one was a weakening of Spain's influence over her colonies, brought about by Napoleon's invasion of Spain and the disruption of her shipping routes by competing colonial powers. The other was an increased sense of individual identity through new capitalist thought and success. Economic independence brought a new confidence that reduced the need to demonstrate allegiance to the mother country.
The individualisation of dance paved the way for the introduction of African movement in contredanse derivatives. A creolisation of dance occurred which was accepted more readily in coloured communities than by the conservative ruling elite. Thus creole dances became identified as a phenomenon of the underclasses, throughout Latin America: son in Cuba; merengue and bachata in the Dominican Republic; tango in Argentina, bomba and plena in Puerto Rico.
Pre-revolution .......................
Fulgencio Batista was the political strongman of Cuba from 1933-1959. It was his close association with two leading Americans that saw unparalleled levels of US interest in the island state. One was Sumner Welles, US ambassador to Cuba and advisor to President (F.D.) Roosevelt. Through him, Cuba became a beneficiary of Roosevelt's "Good Neighbour" policy, opening the door to huge investments from US companies. The other was Meyer Lansky, a key figure of the organised crime syndicates. Through him, the criminal underworld established a large number of hotels and casinos in Havana turning it into the "Latin Las Vegas".
American influence and the Vegas connection in particular, brought in acts like Ginger Rogers and Frank Sinatra, introducing the next big movement in the formation of salsa… Jazz.
The mambo became a recognised style in its own right, separate from the danzon in the 1940s. An increase in tempo, adoption of Jazz lines, and a shift towards North American brass instrumentation, distinguished the mambo from its predecessor. It soon spread from Havana to Mexico, New York and Los Angeles.
The chachacha was also derived from the nuevo ritmo section of the danzon. Unlike the mambo, it was still interpreted by charanga (flute and violin) bands and remained mid-tempo. The big change was the addition of the conga drum (for more information, see the article Chachacha: Classic Cheek, Classic Chic).
The music of both the chachacha and the mambo carries an accent on the second beat. It is particularly audible in the basic rhythm interpreted by the conga, where a slap stroke producing a sharp "crack" sound is played on beat two. Dances to both rhythms begin on the second beat instead of the first because of this.
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