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Name: Strictly
Salsa
Writen by
www.strictlysalsa.com
Date: 03 Jan 1999
Comments
Salsa is not easily
defined. Though many get caught up in the age old debate as to who
"invented"
salsa (Cubans or Puerto Ricans), the truth of the matter is that salsa has
and will always continue
to have a great number of influences that have each played a large part in
its evolution.
CUBAN ORIGINS
Cuba established its
identity by combining the influences of its entire population -- white,
black,
and mulatto. Music played an important role in the formation of such an
identity. The genre that
was to succeed in creatively fusing equal amounts of white- and black-
derived musical features
was the son, which subsequently came to dominate the culture not only in
Cuba, but most of the
Spanish-speaking Caribbean as well.
The son originated in
eastern Cuba during the first decades of the century. From the start it
represented a mixture of Spanish-derived and Afro-Cuban elements. The
basic two-part formal of the son has remained the same from the 1920s to
the present, and the vast majority of salsa songs (which Cubans would
called son or guaracha) also follow this pattern.
Another development that
occurred in the 1940s was the invention of the mambo. Essentially, the
mambo was a fusion of the Afro-Cuban rhythms with the big-band format from
Swing and Jazz. Although bands in Cuba like Orquestra Riverside were
already playing Mambo-style in the 1940s, the invention of the Mambo is
usually credited to Cuban bandleader Pérez Prado, who spent most of his
years in Mexico and elsewhere outside the island. Bandleaders like Beny
Moré combined Mambo formats with son and guaracha (a similar up-tempo
dance genre). The Mambo reached
its real peak in New York City in the 1950s, where bands led by Machito
and the Puerto Ricans Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez incorporated
Jazz-influenced instrumental solos and more sophisticated arrangements.
With Prado based chiefly in Mexico and the New York mambo bands developing
their own styles, Cuban music had begun taking a life of its own outside
the island and the stage was set for the salsa boom of the 1960s.
PUERTO RICAN INFLUENCES
From the early 1800s until
today, Puerto Ricans have avidly borrowed and mastered various Cuban music
styles, including the Cuban danzón, son, guaracha, rumba, and bolero.
Indeed, the richness of Puerto Rican musical culture derives in large part
from the way it has adopted much of Cuban music, while contributing its
own dynamic folk and contemporary popular music. Puerto Rico should not be
regarded as simply a miniature Cuba, especially since genres like the
seis, bomba, and plena are distinctly Puerto Rican creations, owing
little to Cuban influence in their traditional forms.
Since the 1920s Puerto
Rican music has been as much a product of New York City as the
island itself, due to the fundamental role the migration experience has
come to play in Puerto Rican culture. As a result, Puerto Rican culture
can not be conceived of as something that exists of only or even primarily
in Puerto Rico; rather, it has become inseparable from
"Nuyorican/Newyorican" culture, which itself overlaps with black and
other Latino subcultures in New York and, for that matter, with mainland
North American culture as a whole.
By the 1940s, Nuyoricans
like timbalero Tito Puente and vocalist Tito Rodriguez had become the top
bandleaders and innovators, and the Latin dance music scene in New York
came to outstrip that on the island. (Even today, there are more salsa
bands and clubs in New York than in Puerto Rico).
FANIA RECORDS
The Rise of Salsa is tied to Fania Records, which had been founded in 1964
by Johnny
Pacheco, a bandleader with Dominican parentage and Cuban
musical tastes. Fania started out as a fledging independent label, with
Pacheco distributing records to area stores from the trunk of his car.
From 1967, Fania, then headed by Italian-American lawyer Jerry Masucci,
embarked on an aggressive and phenomenally successful program of recording
and promotion.
Particularly influential was composer-arranger Willie Colón, a Bronx
prodigy. Colón's early albums, with vocalists Héctor Lavoe, Ismael Miranda
and Ruben Bládes, epitomized the Fania style at its best and captured the
fresh sound, restless energy, and aggressive dynamism of the barrio youth.
Every commercial music genre needs a catchy label, and there was a natural
desire for a handier one than "recycled Cuban dance music". Hence Fania
promoted the word salsa, which was already familiar as a bandstand
interjection.
The 1970s were the heyday of salsa and of Fania which dominated the
market. By the end of the decade, however, salsa found on the defensive
against an onslaught of merengue and hip-hop and an internal creative
decline.
SALSA ROMANTICA
By the late 1970s, salsa abandoned its portrayals of barrio reality in
favor of sentimental love lyrics. Most of what is promoted on radio and
records is the slick, sentimental salsa romantica of crooners like Eddie
Santiago, Luis Enrique, and Lalo Rogriguez rather than more
aggressive Afro-Caribbean salsa Caliente or Salsa Gorda. Perhaps there
has been some criticism as to this new sub-genre but one cannot deny
that it has managed to keep salsa alive and well. The change is also
reflected in the fact that most of today's bandleaders are not trained
musicians and seasoned club performers like Willie Colon or Oscar de Leon
but cuddly, predominantly white singers distinguished by the pretty-boy
looks and supposed sex-appeal like Giro or Salsa Kids .
Salsa remains essentially alive and well, within its limited sphere. Its
market has grown in Latin America and Spain. The 1990s have seen former
hip-hop/house singers La India and Marc Anthony return to latin music as
part of the new wave of salsa stars, attracting new followers with their
updated images. There is a glimmer of hope with stars such as Victor
Manuelle and Rey Ruiz rising to fame in the current "scene" and many hope
that this will lead to a resurgence of the glory years of the 50s and 70s.
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