Monday, 31 July 2023

Anita Santos Rubin

Anita Santos Rubin is a six times world salsa champion, one of the most recognisable and respected female dancers today. 

Like many dancers of similar standing, she trained in various styles of ballet, which has likely affected her becoming one of the most graceful and expressive dancers of our time.

She was born in Brazil to a humble family but won a scholarship to prestigious school in London at a young age. She later settled in Spain, where she operates her dancing school called U!Dance in Barcelona. Anita also provides live classes worldwide online using her website anitasantosrubin.com, where you can sign up for as little as 50 Euros per month to learn from the best of the best!


Check out one of my favourites of her performances that I was fortunate enough to witness myself at the Teeside Salsa Festival in 2015.

Monday, 17 July 2023

Tito Rodríguez

Pablo Rodríguez Lozada a.k.a "El Inolvidable", is another iconic Puerto Rican musician on our list. He moved to New York during WWII with his brother Johnny and quickly established himself in the developing Latin Music scene as brilliant percussionist and singer.

Photo latinjazznet.com

A few years later Tito Rodriguez organised his own band, the Los Diablos Del Mambo but later changed it to just Tito Rodriguez Orchestra. His first hit, "Bésame La Bembita" was released amids the Mambo and ChaChaChá and earned him honours for developing his unique style of singing. Over the years, Tito and his orchestra played in the famous Palladium Ballroom, alongside Machito and Tito Puente.

Hi extensive discography overarches many different styles of Latin music, but some of them are still very popular and can be heard at Salsa events around the world:

El Agua De Belén

Celoso

Estoy Como Nunca

Bilongo

... and many others!

Saturday, 8 July 2023

Tito Puente

Ernesto Antonio Puente Jr. aka Tito Puente, one of the key figures of Salsa history. Tito Puente was born and raised in the Spanish Harlem, in New York City to a Puerto Rican family. His musical talent was already apparent at seven, so his mother signed him up for piano lessons. At age ten he switched to percussion inspired by the ever so popular Jazz genre of his time.

Photo credit: i.ytmig.com

Tito Puente’s career took off when he joined Machito’s band as a drummer. Shortly after, with WWII expanding, he was drafted into the Army and served in nine battles aboard an escort carrier. His service in the Navy provided him with the means for getting a formal education in the Juilliard School Of Music.
Over the 1950s and 60s Tito Puente played a key role in the Latin Music revolution that hit the clubs of New York. One of his most famous early cha-cha songs “Oye Cómo Va” is still widely played in Salsa clubs, more than 50 years after its first release and has been sung by many, including Celia Cruz and Carlos Santana. 

He has received many awards and countless recognition for his work, including the James Smithson Bicentennial Medal from The Smithsonian in 1993 and following his death, he was also awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003. Tito Puente was featured in iconic documentaries about Latin music and history, such as Calle 54 and the series of La Epoca.

Read more about Tito Puente here.

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