Friday, 16 February 2018

Hi, my name is Leanne and I'm a salsaholic...

My first experience of dancing was when I was about 8 years old and I started having Ballroom dance lessons. I mainly started because my Nanna and Grandad went ballroom dancing twice a week and it encouraged me to give it a go with my sister. I had lessons for almost eight years before I stopped to concentrate more on my school work.


Following this I didn’t dance again until about two and a half years ago. When my friends Ben and Aimi decided to leave their day jobs to set up their own Cuban Salsa dance school I was impressed, but did think they were slightly crazy! As a good friend should, I thought I should support them in their new venture so went along to their first few classes, not really expecting to enjoy it that much. Well, as I said, two and a half years later I am still here! Turns out I enjoy it a little more than expected…!

I can’t tell you what it is about Cuban Salsa that makes it so addictive, I think it’s a combination of the music, the people and the ‘don’t take yourself too seriously’ atmosphere. The classes are always filled with laughter and the whole ethos of the school revolves around enjoying the dance. Aimi and Ben are committed to ensuring the history of the moves and the authenticity of the dance is preserved, whilst at the same time keeping the dance up to date and enjoyable for anyone no matter what your age, ability or day job is!

I have enjoyed every minute of my own salsa story, from those first few ‘here to support a friend’ classes, to now teaching my own classes. So, if Salsa is something you have thought about, no matter how briefly, why not give it a go…. just one class…. what’s the worst that could happen?!? And who knows where it may lead you!

Friday, 9 February 2018

Rueda Formations (Part 1)

Ruedas are often used as a fun warm-up for salsa parties even in the cross-body scene before starting a social event or a more advanced class. As it is a way to break the ice and for people to get to know each other it is often a vehicle to include everyone onto the dance floor which is a very nice idea with one major drawback: Ruedas at social events are overly simplistic and paint a false picture of the dance. I have met dancers who genuinely believed that the dance Rueda de Casino consists solely of the basic step and some very simple moves like Enchufla, Sombrero and Fly as every time they had been to an event, that was all they had been taught.

In reality, Rueda de Casino has thousands of moves and combinations that make it a very complex and immensely beautiful dance when studied and mastered at a higher level. One of the aspects, for instance, that is often overlooked is the concept of Rueda formations. Traditionally there are five structural formations that can be used to build a Rueda that feels complete in the sense that it has a defined and marked start and end point and is varied in the types of moves that are executed. These are in turn.

    • La Entrada
    • Tiempo España
    • Casino
    • Para el Medio
    • El Fin

      The formations la entrada (the entrance) and el fin (the end) start and end a Rueda respectively. They do not have to be included every time but help to give an overall sense of completeness and are certainly included in most shows and performances for aesthetic effects. Strictly speaking moves specific to the la Entrada formation should never be executed at any other point than the beginning of the Rueda and similarly the “el fin” formation should finish the dance although some schools have started mixing certain moves that would normally end the dance such as Sientala into the Casino formation.

      Therefore, once we have gone from la Entrada into another formation we can never go back to la Entrada and similarly, once we have started the el Fin formation we cannot go back to any other formation. However, the other three formations are interchangeable i.e. we can go from Casino into Para El Medio or Tiempo España, we can go from Para El Medio into Tiempo España or Casino etc.


      Friday, 2 February 2018

      Community Projects

      Our not for profit organisation Tiempo España Dance Academy C.I.C is now over a year old and we are very happy with its development. We met a lot of new interesting and helpful people through the set-up and running of this company and have been able to provide Cuban salsa classes to a part of the community that would not have been able to enjoy this hobby otherwise which is exactly what we were trying to achieve. It has been particularly nice to see parents bring their kids along to class in our weekly Monk Fryston daytime class which runs every Wednesday from 10.30-11.30am at Monk Fryston and Hillam Community Centre.

      Our Monk Fryston classes were the first project we started with our C.I.C which were initially subsidised by the Western CEF as part of a 6 week course and subsequently converted into a regular daytime class that is open to new beginners every week. We are very excited to announce that we have received further funding to offer another 6 week course at the same location for everyone who is interested at a reduced rate of £3 for adults and £2 for students and people < 20 years old per each session. The full details of this course are as follows:

      Monk Fryston – 6 week Cuban salsa beginner course at Monk Fryston community centre starting on 28th Feb from 10:30am to 11:30am.

      In addition to the above we will be running further projects in villages and towns within the Western CEF to provide people who do not have the means to go to our evening classes in bigger cities a regional alternative to join us. The upcoming projects we have received funding for are as follows:

      Sherburn – 6 week Cuban salsa beginner course at Eversley Park Centre starting on Monday 12th Feb from 11am to 12pm.

      Burton Salmon – 6 week Cuban salsa beginner course in at Burton Salmon village hall starting on Wednesday 14th of March from 9am to 10am.

      To get a place on any of the above courses, just send us an email to tiempoespanadancecic@hotmail.com. We are excited about the upcoming projects and are looking for further opportunities to provide people in our community with a chance to learn and dance Cuban salsa.


      Friday, 26 January 2018

      Rueda Hand Signs (Part 23) Sombrero Con Plancha

      Sombrero is one of the archetypal moves of Cuban salsa which is immediately recognisable. It is one of the only moves that is performed in almost exactly the same way across the globe and is a clear indication of a couple dancing Cuban salsa when watching various salsa styles being performed in a busy club or social event. It is one of the few Cuban salsa moves that share the same name across most Rueda groups and even the hand sign is fairly consistent internationally with only small regional variations. What is more remarkable yet from a hand sign perspective is that it is probably the most well-known hand sign in the Cuban salsa spectrum to the point where it is often one of the only hand signs Cuban salsa dancers know. Even dance schools where Cuban salsa moves are not signalled tend to know the Sombrero hand sign over and above even more basic moves such as Vacilala, Pimienta, Dile Que No, Enchufla etc.

      Plancha is a category of moves that precede Cuban salsa and is one of the common elements seen in Son Cubano. Plancha – literally meaning “Plank” - is a move where one partner freezes completely leaning slowly onto their other partner so that it looks like they are an immobile object in the process of falling over similarly to the practice of planking (a fad that became internationally popular in 2009). Even though it is a relatively old dance elements it is not often seen on the dance floor and is therefore often mistaken as an innovation rather than something that has been around long before Cuban salsa became popular. Similarly it is often one of the first Son Cubano elements Cuban dancers outside of Cuba are exposed to through the popularity of Cuban salsa due to Son Cubano itself being rarely taught and performed internationally. There are many ways to include Planchas into Cuban salsa but Sombrero Con Plancha is often the starting point for many dancers as it is relatively simple and well supported, so not too uncomfortable or dangerous for beginners contrary to some of the more difficult Plancha moves.

      The hand sign for Sombrero con Plancha consists of the various hand signs for Sombrero (tapping the head with your free hand – see Rueda Hand Signs Part 3) and the hand sign for “Con” which is the moving together of the thumb and index finger of the free hand. This is then followed by the hand sign for Plancha which is a diagonally upwards facing hand to signal a plank lying in an elevated position.


      The word “con” is optional both in the name of the move as well as the signal.




      To see a video of the move Sombrero Con Plancha as well as the hand sign, please click on: https://youtu.be/qGfy2judI4k

      Friday, 19 January 2018

      Rumba (Part 6)

      It is not only the name Rumba that was misused when it got introduce to Western culture but also the spelling of Rumba as Rhumba, which many musicologists agree was a mistake when the name first got imported into North America. It was justified a posteriori as a means to distinguish between the dance and the music or between the Westernised dance and the original Rumba complex developed in Cuba. In reality, however, both spellings were common for both dances as well as the music until it became more clearly defined.


      The dance itself which started off as a modified version of a slow fox trot danced to “peanut vendor” style music went through a period of Americanisation by simplifying Cuban dance elements for American consumption until it became known as American rumba in the 1940s. However, Americans did not hold a monopoly on rumba and disagreements emerged as early as 1931 between Germany, France, England and America on how Rumba should be danced and which rhythm should be adopted. While many teachers advocated their Rumba as a closer interpretation of the Cuban model, in essence, no country achieved in assimilating a dance that resembled any of the actual Cuban dances. I.e. the rhythm of rumba became heavily debated with various schools citing eye witness accounts of Cubans dancing “off-beat” vs. “on-beat” but failing to capture the essence of concepts such as a tiempo and contratiempo.

      It has to be noted at this stage that while the history of International Rumba is marked by mistakes and ignorance there were certainly some genuinely interested aficionados who travelled to Cuba and studied the music and dance in an attempt to accurately reflect Cuban dances abroad. Even in today’s world this is not an easy task to achieve given the lack of documentation and language and culture barriers that surround Cuba but in the early 20th century before the advent of modern technologies such as easily accessible recording devices, this was an even harder task to accomplish. Adding to that the fact that even Cubans, today as well as in the past, disagree in many aspects on how certain dances are supposed to be performed and there are many regional differences that make it impossible for foreigners to agree on a common systematic guide that describe any one of the Cuban dances in its entirety.

      Friday, 12 January 2018

      Rumba (Part 5)

      As discussed in the previous post in this series, the word Rumba was misused to market the song “The Peanut Vendor” around the world which became very popular. Once the damage was done promoters and marketers were quick to use this confusion to their advantage. “Rumba” as a word was seen as having more marketing potential than the word “son” which sounded too close to the English words “song” and “son” (male child). The word rumba sounded exotic and gave Westerners the sensation of dancing a scandalous “black dance” while at the same time not being exposed to the actual African influenced music or dance that defined Rumba in reality.

       
      As the intricacies and complexities of Cuban music were not understood abroad it was easy to say and remember the word Rumba for anything that came from the island and soon it became a general description for Cuban if not Latin music lumping together such diverse groups of music as son, danzon and bolero much to the dismay of Cuban scholars who had to watch the degradation of their culture from the sidelines. This can be seen by the extract of the book “Música popular Cubana” by Cuban author Emilio Grenet Sánchez whose translation by R. Phillips reads:

      “Our neighbors of the North think that our musical genre consists exclusively of the rumba. And even the rumba, embodying in gesture and sound our most outstanding vitality, has been divested of its true spirit and made effeminate in the same manner as the Argentine tango with which our rumba has been confused. The result is something alien to us a superficial, false and unexpressive dance.”

      While Americans and Europeans thought they were listening to Rumba and dancing Rumba, the above extract very nicely illustrates how well Cubans, the inventors of Rumba, thought they had achieved that goal. What followed was a period where the moniker Rumba became associated with almost any type of popular Latin music similar to the way the term salsa is misused today (i.e. see the blog series “salsa leeches on this subject) and the dance that originated in son became something entirely different particularly in America where they merged it with a slow foxtrot making it easier to pick up the dance. Many artists tried to climb on the “Peanut Vendor” bandwagon by copying Azpiazú’s style labelling their music as “rhumba” in turn and the musical movement that ensued and which was in essence still based on son was mislabelled rhumba craze or rhumba mania.

      Friday, 5 January 2018

      Rumba (Part 4)


      Before I write about the rumba complex I want to analyse the difference between international dance forms that claim the title “Rumba” and the original Cuban dances as it is a great source of confusion even for people who actively try and make sense of the terminology. The biggest culprit of world-wide confusion around the subject is also the most documented and internationally famous dance which is also known by the description “Ballroom Rumba”, “International Rumba”. “Rhumba” (with an h) or “Latin Rumba”. Many of these descriptions can be combined to form extended descriptions such as “International Ballroom Rumba”, “Ballroom Latin Rumba” still referring to the same dance.

      What is paradox about the history of Ballroom Rumba is the fact that even though it takes its name from a Cuban category of dance (Rumba) and is in fact based on a Cuban dance, it is not actually derived from Rumba but rather from the Cuban dance Son Cubano. The reason for this blatant affront to Cuban culture lies in a deplorable oversimplification of Cuban music which started with one of the most famous pieces of music ever created by a Cuban musician (Moisés Simons) called “El Manisero” or “The Peanut Vendor” in English. The song has been recorded more than 160 times and was the first authentic Cuban song that was played live in the USA when Don Azpiazú and his Havana Casino Orchestra performed at the New York Palace Theater in 1930. Unfortunately, when the recording was released in the U.S. by Victor Records it was categorised as rhumba-fox trot using not only the completely wrong musical category to describe this song but also misspelling rumba with an h.



      It is lost in history as to who started to write rumba with an h or who first categorised other Latin songs under this name but certainly from the moment Victor Record adapted this approach to “The Peanut Vendor” the mistake was irreversible. The song became such a hit that for most people in the western world it was their first exposure to Cuban culture but instead of identifying it with son-pregón which would have been the correct musical category to choose they started thinking of this as rumba.
      While this mistake was an act of complete ignorance at inception there is some evidence to suggest that even before “The Peanut Vendor” was mislabelled some North American sources were aware of the fact that the category “Rumba” for Latin music completely misrepresented a number of differing musical styles. However, the commercialisation of this misnomer certainly reached a tipping point when this single sold over a million times making it the first million-selling record of Latin music.