By Isabelle Leymarie
Listening
Of African
and European parentage, the mambo is the result of a long cross-cultural
journey, an example of the kind of sensual alchemy which is a speciality
of the Caribbean. Mambo, conga and bongo were
originally Bantu names for musical instruments that were used in rituals
and gradually became secular. Mambo means "conversation with
the gods" and in Cuba designates a sacred song of the Congos,
Cubans of Bantu origin. The Congos have absorbed a variety of foreign
influences and the mambo is a delicious cocktail of Bantu, Spanish and
Yoruba.
Despite its African resonance, the mambo can be traced back to an unexpected
source, English country dance, which in the seventeenth century became
the contredanse at the French court and later the contradanza
in Spain. In the eighteenth century the contradanza reached Cuba where
it was known as danza and became the national dance. Its hold
grew with the arrival of the planters and their slaves who fled from Haiti
after it became independent. The Haitian blacks added a particularly spicy
syncopation to it called the cinquillo, which is also found in
the tango, itself derived from the contradanza. Gradually other
black elements found their way into the contradanza, some titles of which--such
as "Tu madre es conga" ("Your mother is Congo"), which was played in 1856
in Santiago de Cuba at an aristocratic ball in honour of General
Concha, and "La negrita"--reflect this blending.
A
New Kind Of Music
At the end
of the nineteenth century the contradanza threw off its European yoke,
and freer, more spontaneous dancing by couples replaced the starchy formality
of the contredanse. This new kind of music was known as danzon.
In 1877 it had a huge success largely due to pieces such as "Las alturas
de Simpson" by a young musician from Matanzas, Miguel Failde.
The danzon had several sections, one of which was a lively coda which
musicians soon got in the habit of improvising. It was played by brass
bands or tipicas, which gave way in the 1920s to lighter combos
known as charangas, which featured violins, sometimes a cello,
a piano, a guiro (a grooved calabash scraped with a comb), a clarinet,
a flute, a bass and double drums adapted from European military drums.
Charangas,
notably that of the flautist Antonio Arcano, flourished
in the late 1930's. In 1938, Arcano's cellist, Orestes Lopez,
composed a danzon he called "Mambo," and in the coda Arcano introduced
elements from the son, a lively musical genre from Cuba's Oriente
province. As a signal to band members that they could start their solos,
Arcano would call out, "Mil veces mambo!" ("A thousand times mambo!").
Today, in the Latin American music known as salsa, the mambo
is a theme that is played in unison by the rhythm section and serves as
a transition between two improvised passages.
Arcano was a talented musician, but it was his countryman Pérez
Prado who was the first to market his compositions under the
name "mambo," which he popularized as a specific musical genre. He used
jazzier instruments, including brass and drums. Early in the 1950's his
mambos "Patricia" and "Mambo No. 5" took Latin America and the United
States by storm.
The
Temple Of Mambo
By the
mid-1950's mambo mania had reached fever pitch. In New York the mambo
was played in a high-strung, sophisticated way that had the Palladium
Ballroom, the famous Broadway dance-hall, jumping. The Ballroom soon proclaimed
itself the "temple of mambo," for the city's best dancers--the Mambo
Aces, "Killer Joe" Piro, Paulito and Lilon, Louie Maquina and
Cuban Pete--gave mambo demonstrations there and made
a reputation for their expressive use of arms, legs, head and hands. There
was fierce rivalry between bands. The bands of Machito, Tito Puente,
Tito Rodriguez and Jose Curbelo delighted habitues
such as Duke Ellington, Bob Hope, Marlon Brando, Lena Horne
and Dizzy Gillespie, not to mention Afro-Americans, Puerto
Ricans, Cubans, Upper East-Side WASPs and Jews and Italians from Brooklyn.
Class and color melted away in the incandescent rhythm of the music. Even
jazz musicians such as Erroll Garner, Charlie Parker, Sonny Rollins
and Sonny Stitt fell under the mambo's charm, as can
be heard on the many Latin recordings they made in the 1950's.
In 1954
the cha-cha-cha, a kind of mambo created by the Cuban violinist
Enriqué Jorrin, a member of the Orquesta America Charanga,
swept through Havana and New York. Easier to dance than the mambo, with
a squarish beat and a characteristic hiccup on the third beat, it spread
to Europe, before being dethroned in the early 1960's by the pachanga
and then the boogaloo.
Since the mambo there has never been a dance that has given rise to so
much unbridled fantasy and pyrotechnics or reached such rhythmic rapture.
Today it is making a comeback and bringing a glimmer of paradise regained
as the world again moves to its magical beat.
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