Hooo what a lovely and unexpected surprise thank you! It helps me understand the nuances way better. And yes you did well with your pronounciation, it's a stupid old account name I cannot unfortunately change anymore (I should have used my real mail hah).
Glad it was helpful ;) I had to practice your user name its a serious tongue twister lol et oui on fonctionne dans les 2 langues a Montreal;) J’ai du contenu français dans les playlistes françaises du canal toutefois ceux en Anglais fonctionnent mieux…Merci pour tes commentaires, tu es de quel coin ?
I think the music is the total difference, I am leaving in a country with much Cuban, and sometimes I feel that I can't dance a part of songs, since I dancer L.A. I will appreciate if you have any suggestions 🙂🙂
I think you can dance salsa on any style of music but i feel the same way as u… cuban salsa has a particular feel that makes me want to dance cuban salsa style… my suggestion would be to learn it and then switch from one to the other at will;)
New York ‘salsa’ originated from Cuban music genres like the ‘son’, ‘guaracha’, ‘cha cha’, ‘mambo’ and other cuban genres, just ask: Ruben Blades, Tito Puente, Papo Luca, Johnny Pacheco, Celia Cruz, and many others. To say NY ‘Salsa’ is influenced and based on jazz and other American genres without mentioning its strong Cuban roots is quite incorrect. Kindly, know your history…
You are correct but this is not an origins or history video… we couldve deep dive as far as africa in that case;) it was to underline briefly the differences to help people tell them apart which is not easy when you start learning Salsa. Fun fact: There was a decline of direct Cuban musical influence in the 1960s and 70s and the decades-long circular migration patterns of Puerto Rican musicians to New York City meant that New York became the place where Puerto Ricans developed the fusion that became salsa
Hooo what a lovely and unexpected surprise thank you! It helps me understand the nuances way better. And yes you did well with your pronounciation, it's a stupid old account name I cannot unfortunately change anymore (I should have used my real mail hah).
Ah j'aurais pu vous le dire en français, je viens de remarquer que votre école était francophone 😂
Glad it was helpful ;) I had to practice your user name its a serious tongue twister lol et oui on fonctionne dans les 2 langues a Montreal;) J’ai du contenu français dans les playlistes françaises du canal toutefois ceux en Anglais fonctionnent mieux…Merci pour tes commentaires, tu es de quel coin ?
@@SalsaBailaProductions je viens de Belgique ;)
Very informative!
Glad you liked it
I'm Mexican, but love New York salsa
Awesome;) and love mexican cuisine🔥
Thanks
Can you name a couple of songs of each to illustrate the difference?
I think the music is the total difference, I am leaving in a country with much Cuban, and sometimes I feel that I can't dance a part of songs, since I dancer L.A. I will appreciate if you have any suggestions 🙂🙂
I think you can dance salsa on any style of music but i feel the same way as u… cuban salsa has a particular feel that makes me want to dance cuban salsa style… my suggestion would be to learn it and then switch from one to the other at will;)
@@SalsaBailaProductions I see, I will continue to dance L.A😂😂
Cuba. . .2 dogs chasing their tails, new york/cross body. . . 2 robots moving up and down a track. 😮
New York ‘salsa’ originated from Cuban music genres like the ‘son’, ‘guaracha’, ‘cha cha’, ‘mambo’ and other cuban genres, just ask: Ruben Blades, Tito Puente, Papo Luca, Johnny Pacheco, Celia Cruz, and many others. To say NY ‘Salsa’ is influenced and based on jazz and other American genres without mentioning its strong Cuban roots is quite incorrect. Kindly, know your history…
You are correct but this is not an origins or history video… we couldve deep dive as far as africa in that case;) it was to underline briefly the differences to help people tell them apart which is not easy when you start learning Salsa. Fun fact: There was a decline of direct Cuban musical influence in the 1960s and 70s and the decades-long circular migration patterns of Puerto Rican musicians to New York City meant that New York became the place where Puerto Ricans developed the fusion that became salsa
Real salsa is Cuban salsa, American or NJ salsa is just fake.
Americans made Salsa great again
@@SalsaBailaProductions Americans steals the world.