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Encyclopedia > Chachacha

For the dance, see Cha-cha-cha (dance).


Music of Cuba
History (Timeline and Samples)
Genres
Bat and yuka drums - Chachach - Changu - Charanga - Conga - Danz n - Descarga - Guajira - Guaracha - Habanera - Jazz - Hip hop - Mambo - M sica campesina - Nueva trova - Pil n - Rumba - Salsa cubana - Son - Son montuno - Timba
Awards Beny Mor Award
Festivals Cuba Danzon, Percuba
National anthem "La Bayamesa"

The Cha-cha-cha (in Spanish chachach ) is a Latin American dance and style of music derived from the rumba and mambo in 4/4 meter.


History

The term cha-cha comes from Haiti, where it referred to a component of a bell which made a "cha-cha" noise when it was rubbed. The device was kept and used as an instrument.


The music of cha-cha-cha, however, evolved from mambo. In the late 1940s, mambo was wildly popular across the United States, but it was very fast and difficult to dance to. Orchestras slowed down the mambo, and cha-cha-cha was the result. In 1951, Cuban composer and violinist Enrique Jorr n introduced the cha-cha-cha rhythms under this name to Cuban dance floors while playing with Orquestra America. Some say that he came to this idea as early as in 1948 while being with Antonio Arca o's orchestra. In 1953, his "La Enga adora" and "Silver Star" became recorded hits. The dance teacher Pierre Lavelle from the United Kingdom, a founder of the Latin American Faculty of the ISTD, visited Cuba in 1952 to discover mambo (some say, rumba) danced with the triple step in place of the slow one. He brought this dance idea to the Europe and eventually created what is known now as ballroom Cha-cha-cha.


In early days, this dance and its music were both known as "triple mambo" or "mambo with guiro rhythm".


  Results from FactBites:
 
NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Chachacha (561 words)
The chachacha is a mid-tempo rhythm; faster than the bolero and slower than the mambo.
While not as romantic as its slower sibling, and not as frenetic as its quicker ones, I feel that the chachacha is the true rogue of the family.
The chachacha has a cheeky combination of quick and slow pulses, giving it a kind of tension and dynamism that really is something special.
Tromsø Salsa - articles (529 words)
Det later til å være en vanlig oppfatning (særlig blant de som aldri har gått på kurs) om at chachacha danses slik: "1-2-chachacha" eller "gå-gå-chachacha" (såkalt on1).
Konklusjonen må bli at chachacha on1 passer til vanlig pop-musikk (hvor det alltid er aksent på 1-3-5-7).
Danser du on1, eller såkalt LA-stil, så kan du ikke danse chachacha på samme vis (dersom du bryr deg om å danse til musikken).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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