Enrique Jorrín

Creator of the cha-cha-chá — Enrique Jorrín developed the genre in the early 1950s as a slower, more accessible version of the mambo"> mambo that Cuban social dancers could actually dance to without acrobatics.

About

Jorrín was a violinist and composer with Orquesta América when he began experimenting with a simplified danzón-mambo rhythm that non-expert dancers could follow. Where the mambo"> mambo's polyrhythmic complexity made it difficult to dance socially, Jorrín's new rhythm — he called it cha-cha-chá after the sound the dancers' feet made — was clear, repetitive, and approachable. His 1952 composition La engañadora is considered the first true cha-cha-chá.

The genre became an enormous international success in the mid-1950s, rivaling the mambo"> mambo. Orquesta Aragón, with flutist Richard Egües, became the premier cha-cha-chá ensemble. The dance form that emerged — structured, elegant, with a distinctive three-step chassé — became one of the most widely taught social dances in history and remains a staple of international ballroom competition.