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  1. Mambo is a genre of Cuban dance music pioneered by the charanga Arcaño y sus Maravillas in the late 1930s and later popularized in the big band style by Pérez Prado. It originated as a syncopated form of the danzón, known as danzón-mambo, with a final, improvised section, which incorporated the guajeos typical of son cubano (also known as ...

  2. Mambo is a Latin dance of Cuba which was developed in the 1940s when the music genre of the same name became popular throughout Latin America. The original ballroom dance which emerged in Cuba and Mexico was related to the danzón, albeit faster and less rigid. In the United States, it replaced rhumba as the most fashionable Latin dance.

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  4. Nov 2, 2021 · Music. Mambo Music Guide: A History of Mambos Cuban Origins. Written by MasterClass. Last updated: Nov 2, 2021 • 2 min read. In the 1940s and ’50s, mambo, a Cuban dance music style, swept through the United States, starting in New York and fanning out across the country.

  5. Mambo is a genre of Cuban dance music pioneered by the charanga Arcaño y sus Maravillas in the late 1930s and later popularized in the big band style by Pérez Prado. It originated as a syncopated form of the danzón, known as danzón-mambo, with a final, improvised section, which incorporated the guajeos typical of son cubano.

  6. Mambo was the predominant Latin popular music and dance style in the Americas throughout the 1950s. Although the term, coined about 1946, refers specifically to a syncopated rhythm, mambo was a cultural phenomenon, its influence evident in literature, film, modern dance, and classical music as well as popular music and dance.

  7. Dámaso Pérez Prado was one of the great popularizers of the mambo in the 1940s and 1950s. Born in Matanzas, Cuba, on December 11, 1916, he moved to Havana in 1942. A pianist, he played with a number of bands including the Orquesta Casino de la Playa.

  8. Jan 20, 2017 · By Raúl Fernandez. January 20th 2017. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, a new, fast, and instantly appealing music and dance style swept across the globe: the mambo. The man behind the new sensation was the Cuban pianist, composer, bandleader, and showman Dámaso Pérez Prado.

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