The
popular usage of the word “salsa” for danceable Latin music
began in 1933 when Cuban song composer Ignacio Piñerio wrote the
song Échale Salsita. According to the late Alfredo Valdés
Sr. whom I interviewed in 1974, he said “On July 6, 1933, I
married Anita Purmuy, guitarist for the all-female band La
Anacaona. I didn’t have a honeymoon because hours later I
was on a boat with Nacional (Septeto) headed toward Miami…then
on to the Chicago World’s Fair. On the train I rehearsed
Ignacio’s new work Échale
Salsita. He got the
idea after tasting food which lacked the Cuban spices. It
was a protest against tasteless food.
During the late 30’s while the Hispanic community was sprouting
in Spanish Harlem, Gabriel Oller, proprietor of Tatay’s Spanish
Music Center on the corner of 110th Street and 5th
Avenue remembers shouts of “échale
pique, caliéntalo, menealo que
se empelota…” used to describe the thrilling Afro-Cuban dance
rhythms of rumbas and guarachas. Salsa remained dormant
until 1962 when Secco Records released Joe Cuba’s Stepping
Out LP. In Jimmy Sabater’s tune Salsa y Bembé,
vocalist Cheo Feliciano wants his main squeeze to add salsa to the
bembé (dance) when she dances.
The lyrics suggest that there is a request for the dancer to liven
up or spice up her performance. “When I wrote this
tune,” said Sabater, “I was labeling the music as salsa…you
know exciting. When musicians were asked to spice up the
music there were shouts of “guataca”. When the band
executed the mambo part, I heard shouts of “wapachosa”.
These were labels which never caught on. My use of salsa was
to describe the music, not the food.”
A year later Alegre Records released Charlie Palmieri’s charanga
LP Salsa Na Ma. In the Henry Alvarez tune Salsa Na
Ma, the chorus of Victor Velasquez and Willie Torres suggest
that when they dance with their partners it is Salsa na ma…Que
cosa rica (a joy).” However, Al Santiago’s liner notes
described the music as salsa when he wrote “La Duboney (Palmieri’s
band) is a musical aggregation that functions as an individual
unit and possesses that all important ‘sauce’ necessary for
satisfying the most demanding of musical tastes. It is for
this reason that this LP album offering is titled Salsa Na Ma.
On November 20, 1964, the Cal Tjader Quintet plus 5 had just
finished recording a long version of Guachi Guaro, another version
of Tjader’s first hit recording in 1954, Wachi Wara. After
hearing it back, Tjader was unsatisfied, it lacked something, but
he did not know what. Creed Taylor, producer of the album
(which had no title at that moment) suggested a shorter version
and a new title in that Guachi Guaro would be difficult to
pronounce and it meant nothing. Tjader invited Willie Bobo
to dub the jawbone (quijada). While doing so, his
inspirations of Sabor, Sabor, Salsa Ahi Na Ma,not only
satisfied Tjader, but gave Tjader the idea for the album’s name
Soul Sauce (Salsa del Alma). Bobo explained to Tjader that
this track and the others: Pantano, Maramoor, Tanya and Leyte,
were fiery, exciting like a well seasoned sauce. Thus the
album Soul Sauce exhibits a fork on a plate of red beans and chili
alongside an opened bottle of Tabasco sauce with a label on it, Cal
Tjader Soul Sauce. This is the third time music is
described as salsa and the Mexican Tjader fans of San Francisco
began using the word to describe Tjader’s brand of music.
It spread to Los Angeles and other cities and its way east via the
Spanish, rhythm and blues and jazz programs across the United
States which helped Cal Tjader sell 150,000 albums. Prior to
this, Latin music had never been aired over stations with
different music formats.
In 1965 while the west coast Mexican population was using
salsa for uptempo Latin music, the Afro-American population of New
York started another trend. What was salsa on the west coast
was a-zoo-ka in New York City. “Please, Eddie (Palmieri),
sweeten it…give it a little sugar,” a request to spice up the
music with a unique Palmieri montuno. Palmieri composed and
recorded the blockbuster Azucar but the word never caught
on outside of New York. Four years later, Carlos Santana’s
Oye Como Va attracted youths of all ethnic backgrounds to
his music, and conga drums were sold like never before across the
United States.
On August 26, 1971, the Fania artists congregated at El Cheetah
nightclub in midtown Manhattan for a concert and dance which
resulted in the movie “Our Latin Thing.” In the movie,
salsa is never mentioned. The movie premiered July 19, 1972
at the Line 2 theatre at 48th and 7th
Avenue, NYC. It received favorable reviews from the Daily
News and the New York Times. But nowhere in the review was
salsa mentioned. In the 1972 Mexicana LP Rey Roig Aqui
Llegó, vocalist Julian Llano’s lyrics were about the sauce
for his attractive female neighbor in the bomba-son Triago
Salsa.
In January 1973, Peter Rios gave artist/illustrator Izzy Sanabria
the right to use the Latin New York magazine title which Rios
owned in 1967-68. LNY issue number four dated April 16, 1973
had an ad for Alegre LP cover of Roberto Angelero’s Guaya
Salsa. In issue number five, May 28, 1973, there are photo ads of
the Mexicana LP’s Salsa Hits from Orq Power and Tempo
70, and Louie Colon’s United Artists Mas Salsa que Pescao.
In the issue number eight, Sept/Oct 1973, there are photo ads of
“Cheetah, Home of the Salsa” and Vicentico Valdés new Tico
label release Amor conSalsa. In issue number
nine, November 1973, there is a photo ad of vocalist Roberto
Torres’ Mexicana LP, El Castigador is the New Salsa Sensation
Roberto Torres. There is also an illustration of Izzy
Sanabria in a cartoon form with an announcement” a new Salsa
music TV show on WXTU channel 41, premiering Saturday, November
17,1973 at 6:30 pm.” In the same issue is a photo ad of
the DJ Polito Vega which reads “100% Salsa WBNX Mon-Fri 7:30 to
9:30 p.m.” In issue number 12, February, 1974, there is a
full page ad of the Latin Music Festival Musical number five, with
the names Celia Cruz, Ray Barretto, Johnny Pacheco, Tipica 73,
Machito Orquestra and the Apollo Sound. Not once was salsa
mentioned.
In March, 1974, Mexicana Records released Rey Roig’s LP Otra
Vez in which Julian Llano sings Pescao en Salsa.
During the same month, Fania Records released Larry Harlow’s Salsa,
recorded November 26 and 27, 1973. This album placed Harlow
among the top five most popular bandleaders and the LP enjoyed
enormous sales. After this, mostly every recording of
Afro-Cuban rhythms and anything that was exciting in Latin music
was labeled salsa and the anglo market which had abandoned the
music went the cha cha cha followed the mambo popularity in 1956,
came back into the fold. In Billboard’s magazine June 12,
1976 issue dedicated to Latin music, there was a 24 page
supplement magazine called “Salsa Explosion.”…
If
what is written here is accepted as its best evidence, then it
appears that Jimmy Sabater coined the word salsa to mean uptempo
Latin music. Cal Tjader’s Soul Sauce and
Santana’s Oye Como Va gave the salsa movement thrust and
its beginning was with the Mexicans in San Francisco. But it
did not become popular usage until after Latin New York
magazine used it over and over in its ads and stories and the
Fania All Stars used it to describe its music outside New York.
After that kid kicked the can in the opening scene of the movie
Our Latin Thing and the wow wow synthesizer of Luis Cruz Jr. to
Ray Barretto’s Cocinando Suave began to sound and raise goose
bumps on flesh, did the Salsa explosion detonate. The
mushroom cloud fallout has been felt around the world.