Contradanza - dance

Contradanza is the earliest Cuban salon dance — a Cubanized evolution of European contredanse that began transforming under African rhythmic influence in the early 19th century.

Origins

Contradanza arrived in Cuba via a long route: English country dance → French contredanse → Caribbean (via Haitian refugees fleeing the 1791 revolution) → Cuba. By the 1820s–1840s it was the dominant dance of Havana's educated class.

Dance Format

Unlike the couple dances that would follow, contradanza was a group formation dance:

  • Multiple couples arranged in lines or squares
  • A caller or leader directed figures
  • Couples executed patterns together — crossing, circling, changing partners
  • Similar in format to European country dancing, but with a Cuban rhythmic character

This group format made it a social ritual as much as a dance — participants displayed themselves, made connections, and performed their social status.

What Made It Cuban

Even in its earliest Cuban form, contradanza had a different feel from its European source. Cuban musicians gave it the habanera rhythm — a syncopated bass pattern that created a forward-leaning, sensual momentum absent from European contredanse. This was the first audible sign of African rhythmic influence entering Cuban salon culture.

Transition to Danza

By the 1840s–1850s, the group formation format was giving way to a pure couple's dance — the Danza. The Contradanza is primarily of historical interest today, preserved in musicological research and occasional folk revival performances rather than in living social dance.

Legacy

Contradanza established the salon dance tradition in Cuba and planted the seed of African rhythmic transformation that would, over two centuries, produce danzĂłn, son, mambo"> mambo, and timba"> timba.