Cuba and Its Music: From the First Drums to the Mambo - book

Ned Sublette | 2004 | Chicago Review Press | English

The most comprehensive English-language history of Cuban music ever written — from the earliest Indigenous and African music in Cuba through the mambo"> mambo era. Required reading for anyone who wants to understand where timba"> timba comes from.

What It Covers

Ned Sublette spent decades researching this book, and it shows. Starting from Cuba's colonial origins and the arrival of African slaves, he traces every major development in Cuban music through meticulous historical research and vivid storytelling:

  • The African nations that arrived in Cuba and the distinct musical traditions each brought
  • The development of Afro-Cuban religious music ( batĂĄ drums, SanterĂ­a, AbakuĂĄ)
  • The formation of the contradanza, danza, and danzĂłn traditions
  • The birth and spread of son — the most detailed account available in English
  • The conjunto era (Arsenio RodrĂ­guez) and the roots of salsa
  • The mambo"> mambo revolution (PĂŠrez Prado, Tito Puente, the Palladium)
  • The social and political history that shaped every musical development

Why Dancers Should Read It

Everything in Cuban dance makes more sense with historical context. When you know that the habanera rhythm was African influence seeping into European salon music, that the son septeto's trumpet was the "seventh voice" that transformed the ensemble, that the Palladium Ballroom was where Cuban and Puerto Rican musicians played for desegregated audiences for the first time — the music and the dance become richer.

This is the book that connects the dots between all the genres you encounter as a Cuban dancer. After reading it, you understand the thread from Changßí to timba"> timba not as isolated facts but as a living story.

Note

The book covers up to the mambo"> mambo era. It does not cover songo or timba"> timba directly (a second volume was planned but not published). For the timba"> timba era specifically, Kevin Moore's Beyond Salsa and his website timba"> timba.com fill that gap.

About the Author

Ned Sublette is an American musician, producer, and writer who has worked extensively with Cuban artists. His deep personal connection to the music gives the book warmth and authority beyond pure scholarship.