Puerto Rico Guest® A Travel and Sports®, Inc. MasterGuide™ to Puerto Rico, © 2008
Select Language Checked English | Español Expert Help | Email this page | 34249
| Packages / Coupons / Auctions | Create Your MasterGuide™ | Advertise
Puerto Rico > Magazine Articles > Restaurants & Clubs|Island-wide |San Juan Metro |North |West |South |East |Central
/

Restaurants & Clubs April-2006, By:Travel and Sports Staff
Salsa
A Highly Seasoned Sound


Salsa is a sauce, seasoning, a spicy rush of the senses. In music, salsa is a highly seasoned sound that has gathered its influences from Spain, Africa and the Caribbean, fusing them with a touch of American jazz in the vibrant New York Latin music scene of the 1970s and eventually delivering them back to the Caribbean, Africa and beyond as one of the world’s most popular dance sounds.

What is salsa? To some it is a catchword for any number of Latin, particularly Cuban, styles of dance music, from chachachá to mambo to merenque. To others, it is a very specific music developed by Puerto Rican and Cuban
immigrants in New York City during the mid-1970s. If the music respects the clave (a pair of flat wood sticklike instruments that marks the beat), most experts agree, it is salsa. In addition to claves, any salsa band worth its spice has bongos, conga drums, timbales, güiros, maracas and cowbells. Others believe an authentic salsa sound cannot be achieved without horns to add their brash touch to the driving rhythms. Author Ed Morales sums it up as follows: the most common perception of salsa is “extravagant, clave-driven, Afro-Cuban-derived songs anchored by piano, horns and rhythm section and sung by a velvety voiced crooner in a sharkskin suit.”

One aspect of salsa is indisputable – it is music made to be danced. From the first loud and lively notes, couples are on the floor, moving as a unit from side to side and occasionally slipping in a turn. The music energizes the dancers, and great dancing in turn inspires the musicians to grander heights.

The term “salsa” became popular in the early 1970s, when Latin magazines in New York City coined the word. But the music itself originated far away, in the Afro-Caribbean rhythms of the Spanish islands. Puerto Rico has a complex musical tradition that goes back centuries. The European music of the Spaniards evolved into the waltzlike danza, popular in dance salons of the 1800s. Africans arriving as slaves established the most powerful musical legacy. Among African-inspired folkloric music are the bomba, a highly rhythmic “contest” of dancers, drummers and chanters, and the plena, a sung story set to rhythm. The melodies of the danzas and the percussion of the bomba and plena came together to produce the origins of salsa music.

A similar fusion occurred in Cuba. In the 1930s, Cuban bands successfully took the mambo and other musical styles to Mexico and the U.S. In the 1940s, big bands made up of Cuban and Puerto Rican musicians played at the Palladium and other venues in New York. After the Cuban Revolution in 1959, the New York music scene came to be dominated more by Puerto Ricans than Cubans. Some of the biggest names in the early age of salsa include Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, El Gran Combo and the Fania All-Stars with Héctor Lavoe. Lavoe’s story has been filmed locally for a movie starring Marc Anthony and Jennifer López.

Over the decades, salsa has evolved, showing a more romantic side and incorporating Latin jazz and other sounds. Salsa congresses and workshops are held as far away as Israel and Japan. San Juan has been dubbed the reigning capital of salsa, and most major hotels host regular salsa evenings.

And the future? According to Giovanni Hidalgo, arguably the world’s leading Latin jazz-salsa percussionist, “I think salsa will continue to evolve with new musical trends, and generations of music fans will continue to enjoy salsa’s infectious rhythms for decades to come.”
Latest Island-Wide Feature Articles:
Attractions & SightsKid's Stuff
BeachesDestination Beach
Business CenterAAAction - Making Movies in Paradise
CasinosBlackjack 101
Diving & SnorkelingDown Under
EventsGallery Nights in Old San Juan
FishingFishing in Paradise
ForestsPuerto Rican Parrot (Amazona vittata) Recovery Program
GolfLegendary Courses
InformationMasthead
Nature/AdventureNature Adventure Caribbean Style
Restaurants & ClubsKiosk Cooking
Sailing & WatersportsSailing, Snorkeling and Kayaking
ShoppingThe Coffee Craze
SpasSpa-tacular
Restaurants & Clubs Article Archive
2007-04 Kiosk Cooking
2007-04 Salsa Spice
2007-02 Puerto Rico’s distinctive drinks
2006-12 SOFO: Old San Juan Culinary Fest
2006-08 La Placita
2006-06 Jazz
2006-04 Salsa
2005-06 Salsa
2004-08 Hunnngry? You've got the Mesones!
2004-06 Salsa En La Noche
2004-06 Local Libations
2004-04 Trucutru pra...
2004-04 Jazz it up!
2004-04 Fritters
2004-02 Local Flavor
2004-02 Hanging Out
All Archives
Restaurants & Clubs
Sponsors
Casa Grande Café 787-894-3939
Utuado. Jungle Jane's is located at Casa Grande Mountain Retreat. Dine on the veranda in a stunning mountain setting. Comidas criolla and more contemporary dishes are on the menu. Try homemade pasta and shrimp or grilled salmon in a mango-papaya sauce.

Grille Room, The 800-4-RIOMAR
Río Grande. Enjoy traditional fine dining in a warm and inviting club atmosphere with sensational views of our golf courses and the Ocean. Our steakhouse style menu features succulent steaks, chicken and fresh grilled seafood and an extensive wine list.

Liquid Bar at Tangerine 888-265-6699
Carolina: Isla Verde. "Liquid" is the Water Club's main bar and sizable lounge. Instantly discovered by the trend setters, "Liquid" is the fashionable "in" spot in a city famed for vibrant lifestyle and nightlife. There is a late night DJ to keep things going.

Marbella 800-4-RIOMAR
Río Grande. Enjoy spectacular buffets and traditional table service in a relaxed ocean-view setting. Sample a diverse menu, featuring everything from salads, soups, and sandwiches to fresh seafood and prime steaks.

Palio 800-4-RIOMAR
Río Grande. Our AAA Four Diamond award-winning restaurant incorporates authentic Tuscan flavors, rich spices, homemade pastas and the freshest meats, poultry and seafood into its Northern Italian menu. Reservations required.

SeaBreeze 800-4-RIOMAR
Río Grande. Dine al-fresco at this casual poolside restaurant, serving a full luncheon menu, snacks and tropical drinks. Casual dress or beachwear suggested.

Shimas 800-4-RIOMAR
Río Grande. Delight your taste for the Orient at our Asian Bistro and Sushi Bar, serving authentic Japanese sushi, plus a wide array of tantalizing dishes from the Far East. Reservations required.

Tangerine 888-265-6699
Carolina: Isla Verde. "Tangerine" serves American Asian cuisine overlooking the Atlantic and is the creation of well known Chef Nelson Rosado. "Tangerine" recently made the Conde Nast Traveler "Hot Tables" list of 75 of the most intriguing new restaurants in the world.

Wet Lounge and Sushi Bar 888-265-6699
Carolina: Isla Verde. Day and night, the rooftop exotic bar and lounge aptly named "Wet", with the best sushi bar on the island, offering a panorama of San Juan's most dazzling views, the vast expanse of the Atlantic and the buildings of the capital city.


Marketplace
Platos Restaurant & Bar 787-791-6868
Carolina: Isla Verde.


About/Advertise/Contact Us Copyright 2008-1986 Travel and Sports, Inc. puertoricoguest.com