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Salsa refers to a fusion of informal
dance styles having roots in the Caribbean (especially Cuba),
Latin America and North America. Salsa is danced to Salsa music.
There is a strong African influence in the music and the dance.
Salsa is usually a partner dance, although there
are recognized solo steps and some forms are danced in groups of
couples, with frequent exchanges of partner. Improvisation and
social dancing are important elements of Salsa but it appears as
a performance dance too.
The name "Salsa" is the Spanish word
for sauce, connoting a spicy flavor. The Salsa aesthetic is more
flirtatious and sensuous than its ancestor, Cuban Son. Salsa
also suggests a "mixture" of ingredients, though this
meaning is not found in most stories of the term's origin.
Salsa is danced on a core rhythm that lasts for
two measures of four beats each. The basic step typically uses
three steps each measure. This pattern might be
quick-quick-slow, taking two beats to gradually transfer the
weight, or quick-quick-quick allowing a tap or other
embellishment on the vacant beat. This is not to say that the
steps are always on beats 1, 2 and 3 of the measure. It is
conventional in salsa for the two musical measures to be
considered as one, so the count goes from 1 to 8 over two
musical bars.
Typically the music involves complex African
percussion rhythms based around the Son clave or Rumba clave.
Music suitable for dancing ranges from slow at about 120 beats
per minute to its fastest at around 180 beats per minute.
Salsa is a slot or spot dance, i.e. the partners
do not need to travel over the dance floor but usually occupy a
fixed area of the dance floor, rotating around one another and
exchanging places. Although traveling is not ruled out, it is
not a necessary part of the performance. But in a social setting
it is bad etiquette to "take up" too much floor by
traveling.
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