HISTORY OF SALSA
Raíces/ Roots The history of the Latin popular music known worldwide as “salsa” began centuries ago in the islands of the Spanish Caribbean, in a context of slavery and colonialism. Yet, it is inextricably tied to twentieth-century New York City and the growth of a thriving Latino community here. Its distinctive polyrhythm and vocal and instrumental call-and-response identify the Afro-Caribbean roots of Latin music –traditional and contemporary, sacred and secular. The colonial Era The story of Latin popular music reveals the triumph of the human spirit over the crushing forces of slavery and colonialism. For centuries, men, women, and children from West and Central Africa-the lands of the great nations of the Yoruba, Efik, and Bantu peoples, among others-were brought in chains to Cuba, Puerto Rico and Hispaniola (now the Dominican Republic and Haiti). Thrown into encounters with diverse and heretofore unknown African, European, and indigenous peoples and cultures, they carved out ways to ensure their own survival and that of their cultural expressions. Though plantation life was harsh under Spanish rule, it allowed for the establishment of sacred and secular cultural institutions, such as religious houses and brotherhoods, in which tradition could be maintained and adapted and new traditions created. “Cimarron” (escaped slave) communities also provided a context for the preservation of traditional musical forms. By the late nineteenth century, slavery had come to an end throughout the Caribbean region. The euphoria of freedom soon gave way to the reality of making a new life in the midst of economic and political upheaval. The Spanish American war of 1898 resulted in the end of Spanish colonial rule and the emergence of the United States as the dominant imperial power in the region. With the transformation of plantation economies into agribusiness, displaced agricultural workers migrated from countryside into town, and from island to island. Blacks, whites, and “criollos” arrived in Havana, bringing the rhythms of “Rumba” and “Changui”. To San Juan they brought “Bomba” and “Seis”, and to Santo Domingo, “Merengue” and “Carabiné”. Transplanted and transformed in the urban settings, these and other sounds and styles were selectively brought to New York City in successive migrations. New York City beginnings While Puerto Rican settlement in New York began before 1898, migration increased once the island came under USA control. The first Puerto Rican “colonia” (neighborhood) developed in the area around the Brooklyn Navy Yard. By 1917, when the Jones Act made Puerto Ricans U.S. citizens, east Harlem’s “El Barrio” had become the “colonia” of choice for new arrivals. An unforeseen result of citizenship was the earliest collaboration between African-American and Puerto Rican musicians and the earliest documented presence of Puerto Rican musicians in New York City, brought about by James Reese Europe (1881-1919), founder of the first booking agency for African-American musicians and director of the first African-American band to play in the Carnegie Hall. With the outbreak of World War I, Europe enlisted in a black regiment of New York National Guard. When asked to organize “the best damn brass band in the United States Army”, Europe traveled to Puerto Rico to audition Island black musicians trained in municipal bands. The eighteenth men recruited included Rafael Hernández (1891-1965), who was to become one of Puerto Rico’s most famous and beloved composers. Europe’s band (later known as the 369th infantry “Harlem Hellfighters” band) is credited with introducing European audiences to Jazz. Back in New York City, its Puerto Rican members were the first Latinos to record and perform with African-American jazz in the city’s clubs and theater orchestras. Other Island musicians and workers quickly followed, as the interwar decades saw continued economic hardship in the Caribbean and the rise of employment opportunities in New York City. Latino communities in New York supported dozens of Spanish-language theaters, dance, halls, nightclubs, social clubs, and music stores, all which fostered the development of a dynamic New York Latin music scene. And then they called “Salsa” The musical excitement of the 1950’s flowed into the 1960’s. Alegre, the first Latino owned record label to record the “new” New York sound, rose to prominence. Charanga dance ensembles, with their distinctive string and flute sound, challenged the popularity of the mambo bands. Spearheaded by Dominican-born flutist Johnny Pacheco (b.1935), pachanga became a hot dance fad. Eddie Palmieri (b.1936) with Barry Rogers (1935-1991), Ray Barreto (b.1929), and Larry Harlow, developed innovative ensemble formats. Younger barrio musicians such as Joe Cuba, Johnny Colon, and Pete “Conde” Rodriguez created Latin bugalú, the first combination of rhythm and blues and Latin music. The Lebrón Brothers, Willie Colon (b.1950), and Héctor Lavoe (1946-1993) followed suit and moved into a hard-edged, urban sound. Following the Cuban revolution, the United States ended diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1961. This action cut off the flow of music and musicians that had inspired the New York scene for decades. Four years later, immigration policy changes opened the door to migrations from previously excluded countries. Along with other demographic shifts, these two events altered the course of Latin music in ways that defined it even more sharply as a New York phenomenon. By the late 1960’s, the Dominican community had burgeoned, and rhythms such as the Dominicanmerengue, Colombia cumbia, and Puerto Rican plena and jibaro styles had become part of the New York music scene. By the early 1970’s music once identified by specific forms and styles was clustered together under the salsa rubric. The tag gained commercial currency after “Fania” Records- the most influential record label in the field- adopted it to describe the New York music label produced. The name may have been new, but the sound of salsa is rooted in the rich mix of cultures, races and rhythms that is New York Latin music. |
I LIKE SALSA VERY MUCIC.
ResponderEliminarIn Colombia which singer represents salsa?
The last comment was made by Miryen
ResponderEliminarI love the salsa old woman is always best to think of singers like Hector Lavoe - (Juanito Bugs and the day of my luck)(Sandra patricia Pai)
ResponderEliminarHello Miryen.
ResponderEliminarThere is a new generation of Colombian salsa. Bands such as "La Sonora 8", "The 33", "La Republica" show that. But there are musicians and composers Colombian excellence.
hello boys, the blog is important because it encourages when dealing with a folk music as popular as salsa, to that extent I would like to know if there will be a blog space for Colombian groups that have set the standard in this genre in country as Grupo Niche.
ResponderEliminar(Sergio Salazar Quiroz)