The Wolfsonian-Florida International University spins to the rhythms of Turn the Beat Around

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The Wolfsonian-Florida International University spins to the rhythms of Turn the Beat Around
Album cover, Cha Cha with Tito Puente at Grossinger’s, 1960. Jack Burton Davis, Jr., designer. Johnny Camacho, producer. RCA Victor, New York City, record label. The Wolfsonian–FIU, Promised Gift of Vicki Gold Levi, XC2016.01.1.1261.



MIAMI, FLA.- Drawing largely from a recent gift of rare album covers, vintage photographs, and other items documenting Cuba’s rich music and cultural traditions, The Wolfsonian­–FIU presents Turn the Beat Around, on view October 28, 2022 through April 30, 2023. Never timelier, as the U.S. stands on the brink of fully resuming immigrant visa processing in Havana, Turn the Beat Around focuses on the exciting musical fusions that resulted during an earlier era of close diplomatic ties, easy travel, and cultural exchange.

“We are thrilled to be presenting this exhibition celebrating the Afro-Cuban roots of the rumba, conga, Latin jazz, mambo, cha-cha-cha, and salsa,” said chief librarian and exhibition curator Frank Luca. “Turn the Beat Around examines the visual means by which these rhythms were promoted in the U.S., forever transforming our musical landscape.”

Turn the Beat Around demonstrates how thirty years of intense cultural interplay between Cuba and the United States profoundly shaped the musical traditions of both nations. At the same time that American jazz and big band swing swept the island nation, Cuban musicians and performers in the U.S. created new styles that invested American music with a distinctive Latin tinge. Meanwhile, graphic artists in the music, movie, and tourism industries were hard at work creating the visuals used to package and promote Cuban-inspired music, simultaneously exoticizing and Americanizing their designs.

Many of the works speak to historic issues of race and gender in representing ideas of the tropics and the exotic. Women and the female body played prominent roles, as did acknowledgments of the Latin American and African geneses of jazz, rumba, and other popular music and dance genres of the first half of the twentieth century.

The new materials on view, augmenting earlier gifts also made by Vicki Gold Levi, provide the core for describing the impact of Afro-Cuban music on the American dance music scene. “I’ve been taken with Cuba for as long as I can remember—I mamboed my way through high school and never looked back!” said Vicki Gold Levi. “The Wolfsonian has accepted so much of my collection with open arms, and I am thrilled to be publicly sharing many of the objects in Turn the Beat Around for the very first time.”

This donation bolsters previous gifts of Cuban material by Gold Levi to the museum, including collections donated in 2002 and a promised gift in 2016 of more than 3,000 artifacts ranging from cigar labels to sheet music covers. Selections from her gifts are included in Turn the Beat Around, in addition to loans of the performance jackets of Gloria Estefan and Tito Puente, and other items from the Wolfsonian collection. Florida International University is additionally home to Cuban music cultural treasures The Díaz-Ayala Cuban and Latin American Popular Music Collection and The Celia Cruz Music Score Collection, cementing FIU’s status as the leading hub of Cuban culture and study in South Florida.










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