Dancing in NYC |
in Havana in 1943. The Mambo was originally played as a Rumba might be, but with a riff ending, a very fast Rumba, with a break or emphasis on beats 2 and 4.
Mambo music's origins: Arsenio Rodriguez, a famous, and blind, Cuban tres player, built Mambo
from the "Diablo Rhythm" of the Congolese Abakua religion, taught to him by his grandfather, a former slave. The rhythm is born of the African Batá Drums, consisting of three hand-held drums, the Iyá, Itótele and the Okónkolo. These drums play a key role in the development of all contemporary Latin music.
a favorite hangout of enthusiastic dancers from Harlem. A modified version of the "Mambo" (the original dance had to be toned down due to its violent acrobatics) was soon presented in New York and Miami nightclubs, then in dance studios across the country. One of the most difficult of dances, perhaps Mambo's single most important contribution to social dance is that it led to the development of the Cha-Cha.
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