July 28, 2008

New York Salsa Dance Schools: The ABAKUÁ Afro-Latin Dance Company, Frankie Martinez, Performer, Instructor and Choreographer

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The ABAKUÁ Afro-Latin Dance Company

ABAKUÁ Afro-Latin Dance Company, is used with respect for the living tradition of Abakúa societies and their music in Cuba. In Cuba, Abakúa is a mutual aid society with religious aspects, and a style of music and dance that survived decades of slavery and has its roots in the Calabar region of present-day Nigeria. Abakúa drums, songs, and dance are one important type of folkloric music and dance derived from West Africa. Music from West Africa has had a very strong influence on today's popular Latin music and dance. Many of the rhythms heard in popular Latin music and some of the movements seen in popular Latin dance were taken directly from various traditional West African styles, or were influenced by those African styles and developed further in Cuba and other parts of Latin America. For example, the clave rhythms in Salsa and most Latin music, come directly from West Africa. Some of the dance and music came from Yoruba culture (an ethnic group in what is today called Nigeria), and others came from other groups, like the Congolese. But there were also influences from Spain, France, etc., especially in some of the dance movements, and also in the poetry of the songs for Cuban Rumba (which is completely unrelated to ballroom Rhumba).

 During the past 7 years, the ABAKUÁ Afro-Latin Dance Company has been driven by a desire to develop Afro-Latin Funk, a term coined by Frankie Martinez to describe the group's unique style of dance, into a recognized performance art, commanding the recognition and respect of other dance genres such as ballet or modern dance. Afro-Latin Funk is a fusion of many different dance forms, its foundation in the mambo, as it evolved in New York City. Afro-Latin Funk encompasses movements from dances that have become tradition in different parts of the Caribbean such as the Bomba and Plena from Puerto Rico, the Rumba and Yoruba-derived dances from Cuba as well as folkloric dancers from Haiti, Martinique and Guadeloupe. It artistically meshes gritty urban feelings with the heart and soul of Africa and the Caribbean to allow for the greatest range of expression and interpretation of the abundant rhythms of New York and Caribbean music.

For more details call: 212-244-0011

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