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Unity Entertainment Corp.
Santa Monica
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Salsa
Salsa is a pan–Latin dance music forged primarily in New York City by Puerto Rican, Cuban, and other Caribbean diasporas. It synthesizes Afro‑Cuban rhythmic blueprints, Puerto Rican bomba and plena, jazz harmony, big‑band horn writing, and Nuyorican street culture into a tightly arranged yet improvisation‑friendly style. The music lives on the clave (either 2‑3 or 3‑2), with layered percussion (congas, bongó, timbales, cowbell, güiro, maracas), a tumbao bass that anticipates the beat, and piano montuno guajeos that interlock with the rhythm section. Call‑and‑response vocals (coro/pregón), punchy horn mambos and moñas, and instrumental solos energize the montuno section. Tempos range from medium to fast in 4/4, optimized for social dancing (commonly “on1” or “on2”). Across decades, salsa has branched into harder, percussion‑forward “salsa dura,” smoother “salsa romántica,” and regional scenes in Puerto Rico, Venezuela, and Colombia, while continuing to influence—and be influenced by—neighboring tropical and jazz idioms.
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Salsa Choke
Salsa choke (often written salsa choque) is a high-energy Colombian urban dance music that fuses the rhythmic feel and call‑and‑response hooks of salsa with the dembow-driven pulse of reggaeton and elements of hip hop and dancehall. Built for parties, street dance “choques” (dance-offs), and stadium chants, it typically features looped salsa piano montunos, bright brass stabs, and crowd-style choruses over a big, syncopated reggaeton kick–snare pattern. Compared with classic salsa, its harmony is simpler and more repetitive, while the percussion and bass are heavier and electronic, giving it a distinctly modern club edge.
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