Yvonne Daniel
Author of Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Contemporary Cuba — the definitive academic study of rumba as a living practice, essential for any dancer who wants to understand the Afro-Cuban movement vocabulary underlying all Cuban popular dance.
About
Yvonne Daniel is a professor of dance and Afro-American studies who spent years conducting fieldwork in Cuba, studying with master rumba dancers and musicians. She is both a scholar and a practitioner — her research involved active participation in the rumba tradition she was documenting.
Her book Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Contemporary Cuba (Indiana University Press, 1995) documents rumba — guaguancó, columbia, and yambú — not as a historical artifact but as a living social practice in the solares and community gatherings of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas. Her work establishes the foundation for understanding how Afro-Cuban body vocabulary became Cuban popular dance vocabulary.
Danzón was the first national dance of Cuba — the form that unified the island's popular music identity in the late 19th and early 20th century, and the ancestor of mambo"> mambo, cha-cha-chá, and ultimately timba"> timba.
Lees meer >Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Rumba is the most African-rooted of all Cuban music and dance forms — born in the streets, courtyards, and docks of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas in the late 19th century, with no European instruments, no salon setting, and no pretense of European propriety.
Lees meer >Cuba is the largest island in the Caribbean and the birthplace of some of the world's most influential music and dance traditions. African, Spanish, and French cultural streams collided here over centuries of colonial history, producing an extraordinary creative culture that exported itself across the globe.
Lees meer >The following dances have their origin in Matanzas: