Arthur Murray Dance Studios: Dance Lessons, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks, Upland, Ventura, Westlake Village, and Woodland Hills, CA  
Arthur Murray Dance Studios: Dance Lessons, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks, Upland, Ventura, Westlake Village, and Woodland Hills, CA Arthur Murray Dance Studios: Dance Lessons, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks, Upland, Ventura, Westlake Village, and Woodland Hills, CA Arthur Murray Dance Studios: Dance Lessons, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks, Upland, Ventura, Westlake Village, and Woodland Hills, CA

Getting Started
- OUR PROGRAMS
- DANCES WE TEACH
- GIFT CERTIFICATES
- WEDDING PROGRAMS
- F A Q
- BENEFITS OF DANCE
- DANCE DICTIONARY
Current Events
- MONTHLY CALENDAR
- NEWSLETTER
- PLACES TO DANCE
- ANNUAL CALENDAR
- NATIONAL EVENTS
About Us
- MEET OUR STAFF
- TEACHING METHODS
- STUDIO GALLERY
- OUR FACILITIES
- STUDIO HISTORY
- TESTIMONIALS
Contact info
- CONTACT INFO
- EMPLOYMENT
- SUPPLIES & LINKS

Internet Dancing Specials

Salsa: The wild exciting music, and the rhythmical body movements make the earthy Mambo irresistible.

History:

Salsa is the Spanish word for "sauce" denoting a spicy or hot flavor. As a dance it can be danced to a variety of different rhythms. Generically salsa music encompasses many Afro-Latin rhythms driven by the clave (two wooden sticks struck together). Today's Salsa is the result of many years of rhythmical evolution due to economical social and political change. Salsa is the national music and dance of Puerto Rico. Many of the Salsa dance patterns are closely related to those of the Mambo.

Music:

In 1933 Cuban songwriter Ignacio Piniero wrote the song Echale Salsita (throw on some sauce) after tasting food which lacked the Cuban spices. But it wasn't until 1962 when Jimmy Sabater's tune Salsa y Beme suggested the dancers liven it up or spice it up by adding a little "salsa" (sauce) to their movement when they danced.

Characteristics:

Danced to four beats using only three steps, each step being a beat long, the remaining beat is used as a tag to the last step or perhaps an adorning (tap, kick or pause) movement called a highlight. Steps can be traveling or on the spot.

Teaching Elements:

  • Footwork--Steps can move side to side, forward and back or in circles
  • Rhythm--Count as Quick, Quick, Slow or 1, 2, 3 (holding taping on beat 4)
  • Regional Influences--Breaking on count three is acceptable on a regional basis.
  • Compare/Contrast--Marked similarities with Mambo, Lindy Hop, Swing, Hustle

Salsa artists include:

  • Albita
  • Marc Anthony
  • West End Mambo
  • Tito Puente
  • The Latin Explosion
  • Celia Cruz

&Learning the Salsa can be easy and fun. Please contact one of our Southern California Studios to schedule your first lesson today!! Click on any of the following locations to send us an email: Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, Sherman Oaks, Thousand Oaks, Upland, Ventura, Westlake Village, or Woodland Hills.nbsp;

Return to Dances We Teach

Visit our other individual dance pages by clicking on a link below:

[Dances We Teach][Arg. Tango][Bolero][ChaCha][Shuffle][C. Swing][C. Triple][C. Waltz][FoxTrot][Hustle][Jitterbug][Jive][Lindy][Mambo][Merengue][Niteclub][Polka][Quickstep][Rumba][Salsa][Samba][Slow Dance][Swing][Tango][Texas 2-Step][2-Step][V.Waltz][Waltz][WCS][Studio Calendar][Home]


 
  © Copyright 2004 Arthur Murray Southern California