Evolution of Cuban Music (2004) - doc
Also released as Cubanissimo, this documentary surveys Cuban music history through interviews with influential artists and archival footage — a useful broad overview of how Cuban popular music developed across genres and decades.
What It Covers
The film covers the major Cuban popular music styles from son through mambo"> mambo, cha-cha-chá, and into more contemporary forms. Artists across generations discuss their music, their influences, and the cultural forces that shaped each era. It's a good general introduction rather than a deep dive into any single tradition.
Why Dancers Should Watch It
For dancers still building their knowledge of Cuban music history, this is a good starting survey. It gives you a sense of the timeline — how one genre grew out of another, who the key figures were, and how the music evolved across the 20th century. After this, deeper dives into specific eras (the son septeto era, the mambo"> mambo era, timba"> timba) make more sense.
Documentary
A Cuban popular dance music genre that emerged in the 1980s–90s
- emerged in the 1980s–90s
- influenced by songo, rumba, funk, blues, jazz, pop, rock and Afro-Cuban rhythms.
- Known for complex rhythm shifts, aggressive bass lines, and high energy that push dancers to improvise.
Lees meer >Mambo
In Cuban music, especially in salsa and son,
the " mambo" section typically refers to a brassy, rhythmically intense instrumental break,
often featuring repetitive horn lines, call-and-response patterns, and building energy toward the climax of a song.
Mambo
In Cuban music, especially in salsa and son,
the "mambo" section typically refers to a brassy, rhythmically intense instrumental break,
often featuring repetitive horn lines, call-and-response patterns, and building energy toward the climax of a song.
Son dance is the foundation of all Cuban popular partner dancing — smooth, intimate, grounded, and musical. Every Cuban dance style that followed ( mambo"> mambo, casino, timba"> timba) builds on the body vocabulary and structure established by son.
Lees meer >Son dance is the foundation of all Cuban popular partner dancing — smooth, intimate, grounded, and musical. Every Cuban dance style that followed ( mambo"> mambo, casino, timba"> timba) builds on the body vocabulary and structure established by son.
Lees meer >A Cuban dance and music style created in the early 1950s by Enrique Jorrín, evolving from the danzón-mambo tradition in charanga orchestras.
Lees meer >Mambo was Cuba's first global music explosion — the form that put Cuban rhythms on dance floors from New York to Tokyo in the late 1940s and 1950s, and the direct ancestor of the Latin big band sound.
Lees meer >Timba is the music this site is dedicated to exploring. It emerged as a distinct genre in the late 1980s and crystallized in the early 1990s — born in a moment of social crisis, built on the full accumulated history of Cuban music, and still evolving today.
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