When it comes to Mambo, the history of this dance is similar to other Latin dances. Like the Cha Cha, Rumba and Salsa, the Mambo is based in many different cultures, and the rhythms and steps have never grown stale.
Colonization And Latin Dance
Although many people would trace Mambo, Cha Cha and Salsa back to Cuba exclusively, the origins are much more complicated than that. Cuban band leaders helped popularize the music and brought it to New York and other metropolitan areas throughout the early to mid 20th century, but the roots of Latin music and the dances that went with it go back even further.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbwrjOjDKYLkwZsLgHk2j7rxNMFePR0Dr7rW9y7PAQtRDeDe2FeVLZnQA9zcpV0OdrpMAPRlYemo81TU70CeTbFl1RKJ_IKNnGB5tWBsQ63YHCHa5TC7Zax7rH5EqegqSDnMJXXF_9Y_JC/s1600/17511258-salsa-dance.jpg)
New Dance Forms Emerge
At the beginning of the 19th century, slaves merged their traditional music with the Spanish and French music that was already in the area. The homogenized music and dance was called "Danzon," which later split into the Mambo, the Cha Cha, the Rumba and Salsa dancing.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9kxyT05RPqCpU1-_YROpLnenMuIZBTEkR4GMIpYcXEh6bdj7t6UqRmUoPnBqnkw-OGv7AWNLNmVycBapbfwhwL5ZZHMdC3ApHGVyH-g7d448DI6DCq-p9zx0pDPNBHjtlPDXNapzvrn86/s1600/mambo-romero-student-group-1.jpg)
After the Mambo was developed, further experimentation resulted in the Cha Cha, which was a mixture of the Cuban Danzon and the Puerto Rican Danzonette. The Cha Cha style of music was characterized by singers singing in unison. The Salsa was also derived from the same basic beats, but it is much faster and more up tempo than its other Latin Dance cousins.
By learning a little about the history of Latin dance, you can understand how the movements developed. Although we think of these dances as permanent, they changed constantly and continue to evolve.
By: Courtney Ramirez