1970 Topps Baseball

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

The Salsa Turntable is for “Latinos Only!”

Posted on 11:17 by blogger



The Late Ibrahim Ferrer, Cuba

During my salsa dancing days, there were more than one occasion where I felt the need to approach a DJ and suggest some tunes that would make people want to jump out of their seats and onto the dance floor. I personally was just not feelingtheir music. Any experienced Salsero (Salsa dancer) knows that if you can feel the music, it will bring out your best as a dancer, and your dance partner may even want to hug you when the music stops. I know this from personal experience.

I have been listening to salsa music since my teenage years in New York City where Salsa music was born. When I finally got the hang of the dancing routines as an adult, I often thought to myself, that perhaps, I should be a DJ since I know and love the music. I felt that I could really show the people a good time. I had grown discouraged by the choice of music that many DJs here in the Oakland/San Francisco Bay Area choose to play. Some songs are way too fast; great for listening but not for dancing. Still others songs were too long. When I go out dancing, I like to dance with a variety of women and not spend the whole evening dancing with one because the song is so damn long.


La Sonora Carruseles, Colombia

One thing that I notice about many Salsa DJs is that they themselves are not Salsa dancers. I believe that a Salsa music DJ who enjoys dancing can get a better feel for what would motivate a crowd to hit the dance floor. However, another thought popped loud and clear into my head; the Salsa music turntable is for Latinos only! I felt as though I might be invading the territory of a culture that is not my own as a Salsa music DJ. When I shared those thoughts with Marlon, a DJ from Nicaragua, he told me not to trip, it’s is all good! Personally, I thought Marlon was just being patronizing. Sure, I realize that were not for Africans being brought to Latin-America as slaves 100 years before they  were brought to the US that the music we know as Salsa would be a whole different genre of music, most likely with different name attached, and nothing like what the world enjoys today, but II myself am not Latino.



Antonio Cartagena, Perú


I knew two African Americans in the Bay Area who were highly successful as Salsa music DJs. One being Ann, aka Heba who worked at a major nightclub near Oakland, and the other, Larry-Larry, who worked at a dance venue of a resort hotel as well as a popular nightclub near San Francisco. Both Heba and Larry-Larry are also Salsa “dancers,” thus know the right music to play to keep the crowd going. I thoroughly enjoyed Larry-Larry’s music, and simply could not sit down when he was on the turntable. He always attracted a good turnout, and I truly believed that I could be just as good  or maybe better.

What made Larry-Larry’s music (and Heba) so special was that his music had a nice steady tempo where you had time to get all of your fancy moves in on the dance floor without having to rush and wear your dance partner out. I have had women say to me when I would ask them to dance, the next one please; I need to catch my breath! Still, I felt that with Heba and Larry-Larry alone that the Salsa DJ industry was already saturated with non-Latinos, so I backed off not wanting to raise any red flags. Geez! Maybe I was tripping and missed my calling as a DJ with the conviction that the Salsa music turntable is for Latinos only.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Latin American culture, Latin music, salsa, Salsa music | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ecuador Celebrates Black Heritage Week
      Afro-Ecuadorian Cultural Center (below) Negro, negro renegrido       Black, black, blackened Negro, hermano del carbón       black, broth...
  • My New Revelations on Black Perú
    Until today, the focus of my Afro-Peruvian experience and observations has been on the province of Chincha in Southern Perú, dubbed as the ...
  • Black Communities of Central America
    Garífuna in Peril The Garifuna people (pronounced Gah-REE-fuh-ah), descendants of West Africans who intermarried with Indigenous people, na...
  • Afro-Ecuadorian Outsmarts Her Slave Masters
    María Chinquiquirá (pronounced Cheen-kee-kee-RAH), a former black slave in what is now Ecuador's largest city, Guayaquil, is today an im...
  • September - Bolivian “Black Heritage” Month
    Black Bolivian music and dance known as “Saya” In 2011, the National Afro-Bolivian Council declared September to be Black Heritage Month wi...
  • Contemporary Expert on “Black” Mexico
        Professor Bobby Vaughn, PhD AFRO-MEXICO With my being a lifetime student of the Spanish language and an explorer of Black heritage in La...
  • Why Am I Not Considered “Black” All of a Sudden?
      I'm in the back (2nd from right) with members of a Black  family in El Carmen, Perú, the hub of Afro-Peruvian culture My Spanish is fa...
  • Argentina's Black Awareness and Civil Rights Movements
      María Elena Lamadrid When Maria Lamadrid went to the immigration counter with her new Argentine passport in preparation for her trip to Pa...
  • My Issue With the World-Renoun Afro-Peruvian Singer Susana Baca
    It was in 2010 when I posed a question about the world-class Afro-Peruvian singer Susana Baca in my blog post entitled, A Question about Sus...
  • Who Is Black? A Latina Asserts Her Identity!
    I was just an 18-year-old Freshman at the State University of New York at Albany where one Saturday morning, a group black students gathe...

Categories

  • African American-Latino World
  • African Diaspora
  • African-American men
  • afro bolivian
  • Afro Costa Rica
  • Afro Dominicans
  • Afro Latinos
  • Afro-Argentina
  • Afro-Bolivians
  • Afro-Colombians
  • Afro-Cuban
  • Afro-Cubans
  • Afro-Ecuadorians
  • Afro-Guatemalans
  • Afro-Latinas
  • Afro-Latinos
  • Afro-Mexicans
  • Afro-Nicaragua
  • Afro-Nicaraguans
  • afro-paraguay
  • Afro-Peruvian
  • Afro-Peruvians
  • Afro-Puerto Rican
  • Afro-Venezuelans
  • America
  • Belize
  • black Argentina
  • Black Bolivians
  • black Colombians
  • black Costa Rica
  • black Cuban
  • black Cubans
  • Black Dominican Republic
  • black Ecuadorians
  • Black Guatemalans
  • black heritage month
  • Black Latinas
  • black Latinos
  • Black Men
  • black Mexicans
  • black Nicaragua
  • black Nicaraguans
  • black Peruvian
  • black Peruvians
  • black Puerto Rican
  • black Venezuelans
  • Black Women
  • black-latinos
  • Caracas
  • Central America
  • Colombia
  • Costa Rica
  • crime
  • Cuba
  • Culture
  • Dating
  • Dominican
  • Dominican Republic
  • Ecuador
  • Expat
  • Expatriot
  • Flamenco
  • Garífuna
  • Giving
  • Honduras
  • Illegal Aliens
  • interracial children
  • Interracial Marriages
  • Latin America
  • Latin American culture
  • Latin American Etiquette
  • latin american racism
  • Latin music
  • Latin-American travel
  • Latinas
  • Latino
  • Latinos
  • Learning Spanish
  • Love
  • Men
  • Mexican-American
  • Mexico
  • Mothers Day
  • Nicaragua
  • Nuyorican
  • paraguay
  • peru
  • Perú
  • peru peruvian
  • Prejudice
  • Puerto Rican
  • Puerto Rico
  • racism
  • Relationships
  • Retirement
  • salsa
  • Salsa music
  • Spain
  • Spanish
  • Stereotypes
  • The Spanish language
  • Travel
  • Venezuela
  • Women

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (99)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ►  November (9)
    • ►  October (8)
    • ►  September (9)
    • ▼  August (9)
      • September - Bolivian “Black Heritage” Month
      • Challenges of Blacks in Central America and the Un...
      • My Long Distance Spanish Teacher
      • African-American in a Spanish-Speaking Texas Town
      • Visiting Rough Parts of Lima, Perú—I’VE BEEN WARNE...
      • The Salsa Turntable is for “Latinos Only!”
      • Black Communities of Central America
      • Once the Forgetful, Self-Centered, American Traveler
      • My Interactions with Latin American Women
    • ►  July (10)
    • ►  June (9)
    • ►  May (8)
    • ►  April (8)
    • ►  March (8)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (8)
  • ►  2012 (1)
    • ►  December (1)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

blogger
View my complete profile