What is Salsa? Where does it come from? Must Watch!

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 147

  • @yassineriahi3799
    @yassineriahi3799 2 месяца назад +10

    this is the best video ever

  • @1995marixsa
    @1995marixsa 11 месяцев назад +9

    Salsa a beautiful mix of everything ❤❤❤

  • @hcaballeroo1
    @hcaballeroo1 10 лет назад +11

    Let me be the first to say this video is AWESOME..the history of salsa by Mr Salsa " Izzy Sanabria" (the the charismatic MC/Host that is know to have coin the phrase SALSA} with one of the greatest bands back in the day "The Ray Barretto's band",,all for a good cause the Children's cancer sociality..one of the most successful charities around today..together with your support we will find a cure ..its my pleasure to be a part of this wonderful benefit concert..DJ Baxspin

  • @johnviera3884
    @johnviera3884 3 года назад +27

    “And from The Swiss Alps ... The Cowbell!”

  • @barzoly
    @barzoly 6 месяцев назад +2

    Such a masterpiece, just incredible

  • @charlessmith263
    @charlessmith263 Год назад +17

    In salsa, the bass is known as "el bajo". One who plays the bass is a "bajero/a", and the famous lines (usually 2-measure repeats) are called "los tumbaos". In the teclados ("keyboards"), you hear the influence of barrelhouse piano and ragtime jazz music in the patterns known as "montunos" (or "mountains").

    • @Andres-wj5lb
      @Andres-wj5lb Год назад +1

      Bajero/a???? Los que tocan el bajo se les dice bajista/s. Grandísimo ignorante.

    • @charlessmith263
      @charlessmith263 Год назад

      @@Andres-wj5lb Lo siento.

    • @TheUndantaker
      @TheUndantaker Год назад +2

      bajista

    • @richieblondet2310
      @richieblondet2310 Год назад

      Ragtime itself is impacted by the Habanera rhythm (Ask Jelly Roll Morton, or listen to his "Black Bottom" dance recording). And, for the record, Montunos does not translate to "Mountains." A montuno on the piano is a chord in 1, 4, 5. A bass player in spanish translates to a "bajista." (Bassist).
      This music is older than barrelhouse piano playing and Ragtime. The rhythms were born in Cuba created by Cubans of African descent. What those early Africans brought with them to the "New World" was 'clave,' born in Africa.
      What is known as "Salsa" is an updated remanifestation of everything that came before in Cuba, (re)interpreted by a generation impacted by the popular influences of the era(s) they belong to.

    • @richieblondet2310
      @richieblondet2310 11 месяцев назад

      My man, there is zero audible influence of barrelhouse piano or ragtime style piano playing in "Salsa." 'Montuno' does *not* translate to "Mountains." A 'Montuno' equals a musical "Vamp." It is a repetitive chord. On a song like Azucar, Eddie Palmieri is not laying down a Mountain with his left hand. While improvising with the right hand. He is laying down a vamp. Holding the chord with his left (playing a 'Montuno'), while going to town with his right (solo improvisation), in between the choral refrain/montumo section and the eventual 'Mambo' section to come (where the horns repeat music notes, and the Mambo bell on the timbal and the bongo bell (cowbell) interlock.

  • @musicaescriptorium5563
    @musicaescriptorium5563 6 месяцев назад +2

    Tobias Funke is such a good bassist

  • @neldadon
    @neldadon 3 года назад +14

    In the early 1960s, JOHNNY PACHECO was at the top of Cuban-based Latin music. Born in the DOMINICAN REPUBLIC until 11yrs old and raised in New York, PACHECO was a Juilliard-trained multi-instrumentalist who found success playing and recording with his PACHECO and Su Charanga orchestra. At the scene, he met Italian-American policeman-turned-attorney Jerry Masucci, a passionate fan of the Latin sound from New York. When Pacheco's marriage fell apart in 1962, he turned to Masucci to handle the divorce. As one union dissolved, another was born: a Latin music label called Fania Records. The two put $ 5,000 into their company and initially sold albums from their car trunks in Spanish Harlem. The label, in no time, established the musical genre that would become known as salsa, a collision of the traditional Cuban / DOMINICAN SON and pan-Latin rhythms, such as African American jazz and funk.

    • @jmbaggz215
      @jmbaggz215 3 года назад

      That’s all facts…but who kept salsa alive this whole time since the Fania days..it wasn’t DR or PR and specially Cuba.. it is COLOMBIA capital de la salsa 🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴💯

    • @b.a.2406
      @b.a.2406 3 года назад

      Celia Cruz, the Queen of Salsa, slipped your mind?

    • @jmbaggz215
      @jmbaggz215 3 года назад

      @@b.a.2406Celia Cruz kept salsa alive ??? Huh???
      She’s a pioneer , but she didn’t keep Salsa alvie buddy, sorry to tell you…

    • @b.a.2406
      @b.a.2406 3 года назад

      @@jmbaggz215 she’s literally the most iconic figure in Salsa, and worked alongside those others like Pacheco, etc.

    • @jmbaggz215
      @jmbaggz215 3 года назад +1

      @@b.a.2406 due you understand what. I was saying…she is a legend!!! But she didn’t keep salsa alive buddy!!!
      The country of Colombia 🇨🇴🇨🇴 kept the music alive…and still are…why do you think it’s called the capital of SALSA!!!!

  • @charlessmith263
    @charlessmith263 Год назад +6

    The bata drums are also common in some salsa music. The history of these drums last 500 years, and it came from Africa from the Yoruba tribe to Cuba, and then the rest was "salsa history."
    The bata drum rhythms in salsa are various, but one common one is......
    "Da, da, da da.....da da, da da....da....da (or 1, 2, 3 and (hold 4) and 1 2 and (hold 3) and (hold 4) and". Usually 2-measure patterns, like the piano salsa montunos and bass tumbaos also do.
    Also, don't forget the timbales, a Latin percussion drumset instrument which was commonly used first in The Mambo thanks to Tito Puente and others. It is also used in salsa, but more often in salsa's sister, the cha-cha-cha/guajira.

    • @richieblondet2310
      @richieblondet2310 11 месяцев назад

      The bata drum is *not* a common instrument in what is identified as "Salsa." When used it is usually reserved for an intro ("Yemaya y Ochun," by Eddie Palmieri presents La India, comes to mind) which segues to the dance-oriented arrangement. But 99.8% of "Salsa" does not feature a Bata. Especially today. The standard percussion is the triumvirate of the tumbadora (what is erroneously referred to as the 'Conga' drum), the Bongo, and the timbal(es). Anything additional is light percussion, ie. Maracas, Guiros or Claves. 2 of the 3 are indigenous instruments.

    • @richieblondet2310
      @richieblondet2310 11 месяцев назад

      BTW-The Timbal used in Afro Cuban music precede the era of "Mambo" musical production. It emerges during the pre-'Mambo' era. And certainly before Tito Puente emerged as orchestra leader. The recording catalog of Afro Cuban music in the 1st half of the 20th century is evidence to this.

  • @astrojazzman
    @astrojazzman 6 лет назад +5

    EPIC!!!!!! Mr Salsa " Izzy Sanabria"

  • @neldadon
    @neldadon 3 года назад +6

    💯📖🎼🎤🎶👂💖✊💪✌😇🗽🐀🐅🇩🇴 THE GREAT DOMINICAN MUSICIAN MASTER FOREVER .. PAPA de la SALSA.
    JOHNNY PACHECO
    he leave an incomparable legacy ...

    • @Callebravo
      @Callebravo 3 года назад +1

      Johnny Pacheco is not papa de la salsa. You are dreaming.

    • @neldadon
      @neldadon 3 года назад +1

      @@Callebravo 👈😂
      I don't dream son
      Im living in reality as you
      I say nothing but facts,

    • @neldadon
      @neldadon Год назад +1

      Antes de que Fania Records se convirtiera en el centro del universo de la música salsera, 🇩🇴 Johnny Pacheco entregaba la música de su joven compañía desde la cajuela de su viejo Mercedes. Siendo ya un célebre intérprete que había estudiado percusión en Juilliard, él y un socio, el abogado Jerry Masucci, lanzaron Fania en 1963. A medida que la compañía discográfica creó una plataforma ampliada para su música y la de otros, el negocio comenzó a atraer a superestrellas como Celia Cruz, Héctor Lavoe, Rubén Blades y Willie Colón. Pacheco pronto se convirtió en líder de la Fania All Stars

  • @AndreNico-c8l
    @AndreNico-c8l Год назад +1

    Me encanta que cuando dice "las maracas" comiencen a aplaudir

  • @user-e2023
    @user-e2023 3 года назад +80

    I'm so glad he spoke the truth and knows that salsa is from AFRICA. A lot of Latinos don't want to acknowledge Africa or blackness. Everyrhing originates from black culture.

    • @neldadon
      @neldadon 3 года назад +19

      not tru.
      the greatest musician of latin America
      are AFRO TAINO decent. we all know that but
      many are ignorant in history

    • @FunnFoto
      @FunnFoto 3 года назад +3

      @E It's root is African, Cuban, Puerto Rican, The European influence didn't happen until introduction of brass instruments. ruclips.net/video/xkwiYhwKx6I/видео.html

    • @CARLOSManuel-cy4lh
      @CARLOSManuel-cy4lh 3 года назад +19

      Its wasnt created in africa. Africa beat were similar to those used but it was created in latin country becuse that where the final product was heard africa only had the drums latin coutry added the piano, bass, brass, and mix so its only fair to say that it wasnt created in africa. Many vehicle parts are made all over the world but then its all transported to america so it was created in america so thats where everything was placed together and tested.

    • @b.a.2406
      @b.a.2406 3 года назад +26

      Salsa originated in Cuba, it was made by Cubans (of African/European descent) and is closely related to Mambo and Pachanga dances. It’s not “African”, it’s Cuban. Ik that you’re proud of black peoples’ history/culture, and you should be, but falsely claiming that something is from Africa when it isn’t is just wrong. It’s like colonizing it.

    • @b.a.2406
      @b.a.2406 3 года назад +5

      @@CARLOSManuel-cy4lh It was created in Cuba but was heavily developed in the US by Cubans and Puerto Ricans.

  • @westsidehvac1097
    @westsidehvac1097 2 года назад

    Beautiful video

  • @mikechang7232
    @mikechang7232 Год назад +2

    Africa stand up

  • @NycLuv-l1l
    @NycLuv-l1l 11 месяцев назад +2

    What’s the name of the song at the end ?

    • @jonathanstevenvallejorojas9396
      @jonathanstevenvallejorojas9396 6 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/DtQ3K6MQ-Uc/видео.htmlsi=orELw5oh-pqeYnGA after a little research the song is “que viva la salsa - Quinto Mayor”
      Enjoy 😉

    • @saralfc6
      @saralfc6 23 дня назад

      Que Viva la Salsa - Quinto Mayor

  • @jaybrown3341
    @jaybrown3341 Год назад

    ✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾

  • @calejandro4075
    @calejandro4075 Год назад

    0:06

  • @juandavidc.6915
    @juandavidc.6915 5 лет назад +4

    2:39
    No puedo creer que hallas malogrado el vídeo de esta.manera .

    • @atrroko4504
      @atrroko4504 4 года назад +2

      en casi toso los vídeos sala así pero acá esta completa
      ruclips.net/video/VXUwGSqi-oY/видео.html