
Search Results for: salsa
Europe – June 2023
Festivals in June 2023, Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand
Spring in Europe
The next beginning of rest in summer, pleasant temperatures at night and heat during the day, the work of the year has its rewards in holidays and is traveling, knowing places and people, cultures and languages and all this leads us to have fun as a couple or alone and thus meet nice people with whom to share, and at this point we want to captivate you by enjoying tropical dances, commonly called Latin music, as it is Salsa, Bachata, Kizomba among other variables are sensual and exotic rhythms in many cases, that make us experience pleasant bodily and sensory, for this incredible experience we have festivals in the European continent and Asia with some ease of transport according to our budgets but if we want to go further let’s not forget the beautiful beaches and active life of New Zealand very few hours by plane
This month of June we have festivals in the following countries and do not forget that next month comes Tempo Latino, a festival like no other, about which I will be informing you.
|
Germany Cologne Salsa Congress |
![]() |
| Spain
Estilos Unidos Dance Festival |
![]() |
| Latin Dance Festival & WTP European Meeting Summer Edition Jun 02 2023 – Jun 04 2023 Lloret de Mar, Spain https://www.facebook.com/LatinDanceFestivalWTP |
![]() |
| CROACIA
Summer Sensual Days Jun 05 2023 – Jun 12 2023 Rovinj, Croatia |
![]() |
|
Croatian Summer Salsa Festival 2023 Jun 12 2023 – Jun 19 2023 Rovinj, Croatia |
![]() |
| NEW ZEALAND
NZ Salsa Congress Jun 02 2023 – Jun 04 2023 Wellington , New Zealand |
![]() |
| FRANCE
Kizomba Gala Challenge Festival Jun 08 2023 – Jun 12 2023 Saint Herblain, France |
![]() |
|
PORTUGAL Estrutura Kizomba Summer Festival Jun 15 2023 – Jun 18 2023 Chaves, Portugal |
![]() |
|
Aquae Flaviae International Congress Jun 16 2023 – Jun 18 2023 Chaves, Portugal |
![]() |
| KOREA
Jeju Latin Culture Festival Jun 22 2023 – Jun 25 2023 Jeju-si, South Korea |
![]() |
| MALAYSIA
Afro Latin Fest Asia Jun 23 2023 – Jun 25 2023 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
|
![]() |
| ROMANIA
Carpathian Latino Fest Jun 24 2023 – Jun 26 2023 Ramnicu Valcea, Romania |
![]() |
ISM Edition June 2023
Francisco Aguabella “El Tamborero de Cuba” Bravo and Virtuoso Percussionist of Afro-Cuban Ritual Music
Aguabella was born on October 10, 1925 and grew up in the drumming tradition of Matanzas in Cuba.
On May 8, 2010, Francisco Aguabella “El Tamborero de Cuba” passed away in Los Angeles, United States. Bravo and virtuoso percussionist of Afro-Cuban ritual music, Latin/jazz and jazz.
Of remembered links to Tito Puente’s band, Mongo Santamaría, Cachao López, Eddie Palmieri, Dizzy Gillespie, Frank Sinatra, Jorge Santana’s group “Malo” and his own “Latin Jazz Emsemble”.

In 1953 he emigrated to the United States and settled in California as an olu batá (bata drummer).
Batá drumming is a ceremonial musical style that plays an integral role in the African-derived Santeria religion practiced in Cuba, Puerto Rico and since the 1950s in the United States.
No other music of the Americas bears a more striking similarity to West African music than the batá. Its set of three double cone drums reproduces the Nigerian Yoruba drum set of the same name.

Many of the rhythms closely resemble their African prototypes, and the Afro-Cuban language of Lucumí, in which Aguabella sings, is clearly a derivation of Yoruba.
Prior to 1980, Aguabella and Julito Collazo were the only olu batá in the United States who had been initiated into a secret society of drummers designated to perform a very sacred type of batá known as batá fundamento .
The batá fundamento is an integral part of Santeria ceremonies in which an individual’s initiation into the religion cannot be consecrated unless he or she has been presented before this sacred ensemble.
Each year Aguabella builds a shrine for his patron saint, Santa Barbara (Changó), and plays music at a birthday party held in her honor.

It’s an all-day celebration for invited friends who are primarily but, not exclusively members of the Santeria sect “Santa Barbara knows it’s her birthday,” Aguabella said, “I know how she feels.
She feels happy if I honor her, I feel bad if I don’t so on St. Barbara’s day every December 4 whatever work I am doing today I don’t do for anyone, I love this saint very much and I promised her I was going to have a party every year.

Although Aguabella is widely respected for his sacred drumming he is also known for his virtuosity in the secular forms of Afro-Cuban music.
Choreographer Katherine Dunham was so impressed with Aguabella’s drumming that she invited him to join her company for tours of South America and Europe.
The most influential of Aguabella’s secular styles is rumba, a complex of several musical genres that evolved in Cuba in the early 20th century.
Rumba was the basis for much of the Cuban dance hall music that in turn helped shape American popular music through dance bands based throughout the United States.
However Afro-Cuban rumba bears little resemblance to the ballroom dance rumba that inspired Francisco. Rumba as Aguabella said is part of daily life for many Afro-Cubans, it doesn’t have to be a special day to play rumba, we could start a rumba here without a drum.
You could play it here or there on the wall, in Cuba rumba is 24 hours a day, we gather in a corner and have a glass of rum…. And someone says: Why don’t we play a little rumba? Some people touch the wall and someone else plays a bottle and maybe takes a cap off the bottle and ‘ca ca ca ca ca ca ca ca ca’ and the Rumba.”
Aguabella’s goal has long been to maintain the integrity of the tradition he so respects, while incorporating it into “crossover” music aimed at a wider audience.
It was his superior musical ability and commitment to tradition that led musicians such as Mongo Santamaria, Malo and Carlos Santana to bring him into their groups.

Aguabella lived in Los Angeles; where he continued to performand exert a great influence on Latin American music.
Read Also: Tata Güines known as Manos de Oro, Cuban rumbero and percussionist






















