Originally, the word Rumba (Room-Bah) was a generic term used to describe a music style rather than a dance style. The Ballroom Rumba that is danced today is not really the "Rumba of Cuba." The Ballroom Rhumba of today is really an offshoot of the "Son" (slower) or" Danzon" (even slower)" done in Cuba, a much slower and polite version of the true, sexually "frantic" (& FAST) Rumba. The "Son" was a popular middle class Cuban dance which is a modified version of the Rumba ... and the danzon' is even a slower version than the Son.
Originally, it is said that the real Rumba came to Cuba through the African Slaves imported from Spain into that country over two hundred years ago. Cuba eventually banned the dance as being to wild to dance in public. Eventually the law was forgotten about and some people started dancing it which helped people become more aware of the dance during the 1920s and by 1925 President Machado put the ban back into effect, his decree stated: "this class of music (referring to african music) and the 'rumba' are contrary to the good custom and public order of Cuba." However it was reported that the upper classes in Cuba did not dance the Rumba anyway, as it was to wild and frantic.
The Son is played in two parts (chorus and verse) while the Son dancers only dance to the chorus. The claves (instrument) create the mood of the dance. However, it may have been originally a Pantomimic dance of Africa that found its way to Cuba (Afro-Cuban.) The son as a music began to take shape in the latter half of the 19th century in Cuba's Oriente province, and gave birth to several hybrids including the afro-son, guajira-son, son-pregón and son-montuno. The son is perhaps the most important form at the root of today's popular salsa music. After a period of change and development here in the States, the Son evolved into a popular sensual couples dance known today as the "Rumba."
Today there are three distinct styles of rumba done in Cuba with the dance primarily being danced as a freestyle or solo (non-lead and follow) dance. The first being called the "Guaguancó," which is a seduction between the man and woman whereas he can try get carnal and "attack" her. The second is the "Yambú" which has a flirty woman dancing with a older man (man can be young too) who cannot get carnal or "attack" her and finally the more polite "Columbia" which is more the traditional rooster and hen dance where the male struts his masculinity around and about the female." Lew Quinn and Joan Sawyer is said to have tried the first real attempt at introducing the Rumba to Americans as far back as 1913, followed by Emil Coleman in 1923 and by Benito Collada in 1925 at a club called "El Chico" in Greenwich Village. In 1929 a small interest was growing in Latin-American music and in 1930 a Nuevos Ritmo (new rhythm) song called "The Peanut Vendor" by Don Azpiazu's Havana Casino Orchestra was released which became a hit as a new DANCE to American dance forms. By the 1930's all of America had become knowledgeable of Latin music and the Rumba. The "American Rumba" of today is a version of the son that Quinn and Sawyer tried to introduce years ago. Today it is known as a "Latin-Ballroom" couples dance (lead and follow) and correctly titled the "Dance Of Romance." The American and International styled Rumba's can be a very beautiful dance when done by a polished couple.
Many of the erotic movements of the Ballroom Rumba stemmed from the original dancers of cuba doing the tasks of the day such as "shoeing the mare," "climbing a rope," or the "courtship of barnyard fowls." The costumes that many performers originally wore, represented this in the woman's long ruffled train of her skirt (hens feathers) or the mans ruffled shirt sleeves and or chest which represents the cocks hackle feathers. Today's latin costumes look more like Lingerie. The Ballroom Rumba is a nice dance for dancers to showcase their technique ability and a polite sensuousness and romantic flair on a dance floor, whereas the Cuban rumba is more a rhythmic street dance and can appear to be of a cool, yet hectic and sometimes wild abandon with the technique more about the rhythm, roots and soul of the dance, rather than being a commercially pretty dance form.
The Rumba is sometimes spelt as Rhumba. The Jamaican Mento dance closely resembles the Rumba. The Rumba was replaced in popularity by the Mambo, and later the Cha-Cha.
Also a new dance (c.1975) called the Night Club-Two Step was originally known as "Disco Two Step" (Buddy Schwimmer) is a modern semi-version of the Rumba, (a few say samba), it is done to modern slow music by pop artists such as Madonna, etc. NC-2 is mainly done in the West Coast Swing and Country Western community.
1866 - La Paloma
$ Chica Chica Boom Chic (Gilberto) Mama/Chica medley
1929 - Siboney
$ Con un solo pie (Son) Cuarteto Caney
1930 - The Peanut Vendor
$ Cuban Dance (org. 1905) (a version by Andrei Krylov)
$ Doin' The Rhumba (1930) Cab Calloway
1931 - When Yuba Plays The Rumba
$ Echale Salsita (1933) (1950 Septeto version)
1931 - Mama Inez-Celebre Rumba
El Charro (1938)
1935 - Rhythm Of The Rumba
Edskin Rhumba
1935 - I'm Yours Tonight
La Pachanga (Son)
1935 - Midnight In Santiago
La Paloma (1866)
1937 - Doing The Reactionary
Lavuna Rhumba (Bock)
1938 - Jamaican Rumba
Oh, Donna Clara
Rhumba Baca (Bock)
Rita, The Rumba Queen (Roy Fox)
Rose Rumba (S. Betchet)
Rumba-Rumba
Rhumba Swing (Cyd Charisse)
Sola Y Triste by Morales
Son de la Ma Teodora (Teodora Gines c.1580-1630)
Una rumba y una guaracha
When Yuba Plays The Rumba on His Tuba
A Little Rumba Numba (1941)
1930 - Fifth Avenue Girl (Tropicana # Ginger Rogers)
1931 - The Cuban Love Song
1933 - When Yuba Plays the Rumba on the Tuba
1937 - Universal Newsreel (Ronrico dance)
1939 - Rumba
1939 - Rumba Land
1941 - Cuban Rhythm
1942 - Harlem Rhumba
1945 - Rhythm of the Rumba
16mm - Shoeing the Mare (Varios & Vida)
1946 - Let's Rhumba
1946 - Viewmaster reel #572 - cuban rumba dancers
1949 - Barkley's Of Broadway
1949 - D.O.A. (Dead On Arrival)
1949 - Marakatumba... ma non è una rumba
1952 - Rhumba Caliente
1954 - Que Bravas Son Las Costenas
1966 - Crazy Quilt
1982 - Rumba
1987 - La Rumba
1989 - Last Rumba in Paris
1990 - Rumba
1930 - Artists and Models (Paris-Riviera Ed)
1930 - Third Little Show
1937 - Pins & Needles
Bambuco
Flamenco/ Spanish
Maxixe
Ronrico (new Rhumba 1937)
Bolero
Guagira
Mento dance
Salsa (aka: mambo)
Bossa Nova
Guaracha
Merengue
Samba
Carioca
La Conga (Conga)
Mex Hat Dance
Spanish Dance
Cha-Cha
La Cucaracha
Naningo
Tango
Chorro
La Rhumba
Night Club (or disco) Two-Step
Danzon
Little Boat Dance
Pachanga
The Son
Jamaican Mento
Mambo
Paso Doble
Waltz
Al Toneatti & Marion
Laure Haile & Andre
Marge & Gower Champion
Carole Lombard
Mrs. Nora Osorio
Clifton Webb
Ramon & Rosita
D' Avalos and Aleida (Let's Rumba)
Ramon Navarro
Ramon and Renita (the Ronrico)
Fred Astaire
Renee & Stella
George Raft
The De Marcos
Ginger Rogers
Veloz and Yolanda
Gluck Sandor (Pins & Needles)
Varios & Vida
Gomez & Winona
Gerardo Rumba Dancers (1941)
Irene Castle
Down Memory Lane
Murray, Arthur
1954
Greenberg
Let's Dance (The Champions)
Thomas, Bob
Grossett & Dunlap
$ Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Cuba
Daniel, Yvonne
1995
Indiana University Press
Arthur Benjamin
Edyie Gorme
Caney
Mel Torme
Edmund Ross Rumba Band
Igna Zio Cervantes
Jon Bock
Machito
Perez Prado
Ralph Rainger
Rumboso Orquetra (1807)?
Tito Puente
Xavier Cugat
Flamenca
Mambo / Salsa
Timba Rigurosa
Apache Dance
Guaguaguancó
Oya
Yambu (yambú)
Cajon
Latin
Rhythm
Zoot Suit (also Riots)
Columbia
The Clave - A five-note, bi-measure pattern which serves as the foundation for all of the rhythmic styles in salsa music. The clave consists of a "strong" measure containing three notes (also called the tresillo), and a "weak" measure containing two notes, resulting in patterns beginning with either measure, referrred to as "three-two" or two-three." There are two types of clave patterns associated with popular (secular) music: son clave and rumba clave. Another type of clave - 6/8 clave - originated in several styles of West African sacred music. (from: Salsa Guidebook for Piano and Ensemble, Mauleon, R. (1993)
Basic Step: (Leader starts Left foot, Follower starts Right foot, Forward, Face Partner, Ballroom Hold) Quick---Quick........S l o w (= 3 STEPS or 4 BEATS) ---1,------2, ---------3----4 (repeat again with other foot backward). (3 steps starting forward then 3 steps backward = 8 Counts of music, 4+4).
note: Can also be done "Side to Side" or in a "Box Step" (see waltz) pattern. Exaggerate hip movements, Leads are very smooth. Dance is done slow and romantic (ORIGINAL VERSION WAS DONE FASTER). Dance is done in place (doesn't travel). Can be done S l o w.... Quick-Quick
http://www.Streetswing.com/histmain/d5index.htm
Streetswing.com