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  1. Jun 22, 2018 · Renato y la 4 Estrellas – ‘La Chica de los Ojos Café’ The crew boards an intricately painted Diablo Rojo bus. They hand a Jamaican reggae B-side cassette to the driver to pump over the ...

  2. Apr 8, 2018 · The distinctive sound of today's reggaeton is a mix of Jamaican dancehall rhythms, derived from reggae, and Latin merengue, bomba, plena and sometimes salsa. It's heavily percussive beat is called "dembow" and comes from Trinidad's 'soca' music; it fuses electronic dance music, hip-hop elements and Spanish / Spanglish rap to form a compelling ...

  3. Semba is a lively and expressive dance that involves fast footwork, spins, and tricks. It is often danced at parties and celebrations. The word “kizomba” means “party” in Kimbundu, a Bantu language spoken by the Ambundu people in Angola1. In the 1980s, semba music was influenced by zouk, a musical genre that originated in the French ...

  4. Nov 4, 2022 · Best Answer. Reggaeton come from the island of Puerto Rico. Big Pun was the first Reggaeton/hip hip artes to bring the sound together in Bronx New York. Wiki User.

  5. Nov 29, 2022 · The name "reggaeton" comes from the word "reggae" plus the Spanish suffix -tón, from the reggae and hip-hop marathons in the Puerto Rican underground music scene. Reggaeton gets its influences from Jamaican reggae, hip-hop, Jamaican dancehall, bomba, and plena music. It was created in Puerto Rico, but the genre evolved from a Panamanian ...

  6. It comes from Jamaican dancehall. It was brought to Panamá by Jamaican migrants and they started singing it in Spanish, they just called it reggae, it blew up in Puerto Rico and they started making "reggaeton playero" which was basically the same Jamaican riddims but sung in Spanish. Gradually it evolved to the reggaeton we know today.

  7. Salsa music is a genre of music, generally defined as a modern style of playing Cuban Son, Son Montuno, and Guaracha with touches from other genres of music. Originally, Salsa was not a rhythm in its own right, but a name given in the 1970s to various Cuban-derived genres, such as Son, Mambo and Son Montuno. We are highlighting Roberto Clemente ...