Current:Home > NewsOye como va: New York is getting a museum dedicated to salsa music -Secure Growth Solutions
Oye como va: New York is getting a museum dedicated to salsa music
View
Date:2025-04-17 22:04:23
The heart of salsa - the fast-tempo, horn-heavy music and its hip-swinging dance style - has beat loudly and strongly in New York for decades. The Bronx even earned the title of "El Condado de la Salsa," or "The Borough of Salsa."
Now the city is home to the first museum dedicated to the music that traces its roots to Africa.
Unlike other museums around New York teeming with displays and hushed voices, the International Salsa Museum promises to be lively and flexible, with plans to eventually include a recording studio, along with dance and music programs.
The museum is also evolving, much like the music it is dedicated to. It currently hosts large pop-ups while its board seeks out a permanent home, and the museum is not expected to occupy its own building in the next five years.
For a permanent space, the museum founders have their heart set on a decommissioned military facility called Kingsbridge Armory in The Bronx.
The legacy of salsa should be held in the place it was popularized, said board member Janice Torres. Having the museum in The Bronx is also about providing access to a community that is often overlooked, she said.
"We get to be the ones who help preserve history – meaning Afro-Latinos, meaning people from New York, from The Bronx, from Brooklyn, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic," Torres said. "We get to help preserve our oral histories."
Puerto Rican and living in New York, Torres calls herself a descendant of the genre.
Even people who don't share a common language speak salsa, she said, with salsa events attracting people from all over the world.
From Africa to The Bronx, and then beyond
"The origins of salsa came from Africa with its unique, percussive rhythms and made its way through the Atlantic, into the Caribbean," said the museum's co-founder, Willy Rodriguez. "From there it became mambo, guaracha, guaguanco, son montuno, rumba."
And from there, the music was brought to New York by West Indian migrants and revolutionized into the sounds salseros know today.
"If we don't preserve this, we're definitely going to lose the essence of where this music came from," Rodriquez said, adding that salsa is "deeply embedded in our DNA as Latinos and as African Americans."
The International Salsa Museum hosted its first pop-up event last year in conjunction with the New York International Salsa Congress. Fans listened and danced to classic and new artists, among other things.
Visual artist Shawnick Rodriguez, who goes by ArtbySIR, showed a painting of band instruments inside a colonial-style Puerto Rican home.
"When I think of Puerto Rico, I think of old school salsa," she said. "Even when it comes to listening to salsa, you think of that authentic, home-cooked meal."
The next pop-up is planned for Labor Day weekend in September.
Part of the museum's mission is to influence the future, along with educating the present and preserving the past. That could include programs on financial literacy, mental health and community development, Rodriguez said.
Already, the museum has teamed up with the NYPD's youth program to help bridge the gap between police and the community through music.
"It's not just about salsa music, but how we can impact the community in a way where we empower them to do better," said Rodriguez.
Ally Schweitzer edited the audio version of this story. The digital version was edited by Lisa Lambert.
veryGood! (79)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise's Daughter Bella Celebrates the End of Summer With Rare Selfie
- AP PHOTOS: Moroccan earthquake shattered thousands of lives
- The Red Cross: Badly needed food, medicine shipped to Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- With playmakers on both sides of ball, undefeated 49ers look primed for another playoff run
- Fantasy football sizzlers, fizzlers: Return of Raheem Must-start
- Allow Anne Hathaway to Re-frame Your Idea of Aging
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Wild black bear at Walt Disney World in Florida delays openings
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Newborn baby found dead in restroom at New Mexico hospital, police investigation underway
- 'American Fiction' takes Toronto Film Festival's top prize, boosting Oscar chances
- Two facing murder charges in death of 1-year-old after possible opioid exposure while in daycare in Bronx
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Nigel becomes a hurricane but poses no immediate threat to land as it swirls through Atlantic
- Taiwan says 103 Chinese warplanes flew toward the island in a new daily high in recent times
- UAW strike, Trump's civil trial in limbo, climate protests: 5 Things podcast
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Billy Miller, 'Young and the Restless,' 'General Hospital' soap star, dies at 43
American Sepp Kuss earns 'life changing' Vuelta a España win
Clinton Global Initiative will launch network to provide new humanitarian aid to Ukrainians
Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
A Florida man bought a lottery ticket with his Publix sub. He won $5 million.
Co-worker: Rex Heuermann once unnerved her by tracking her down on a cruise: I told you I could find you anywhere
Centuries after Native American remains were dug up, a new law returns them for reburial in Illinois