WASHINGTON, D.C.- Since the end of World War II, Latin music - salsa, mambo, rumba, cha-cha-cha - has profoundly influenced American popular music. Latino musicians helped shape many traditional genres of music in the United States, including jazz, R&B, rock 'n' roll, and hip hop. Featuring bilingual text panels, graphics and photographs, listening stations, films, and musical instruments, this exhibition reveals the true flavor, or "sabor," of Latin music in the United States. It focuses on five cities that represent the remarkable diversity of Latino popular music - New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, San Antonio, and San Francisco - to explore the broader histories and cultures that created the music emerging from those areas. The exhibition is on display until October 9, 2011.
Latino musicians have had a profound influence on traditional genres of music in the United States, including jazz, R&B, rock n roll, and hip-hop. At the same time, their experiences living in the United States triggered the creation of new musical traditions, such as mambo and salsa. American Sabor: Latinos in U.S. Popular Music, a traveling exhibition from the
Smithsonian, presents the musical contributions of U.S. Latinos from the 1940s to the present, exploring the social history and individual creativity that produced stars like Tito Puente, Ritchie Valens, Celia Cruz, Carlos Santana and Selena.
Divided into 5 sections,
American Sabor explores the influence of Latino musicians in post-World War II America through the lens of major centers of Latino music productionNew York, San Antonio, San Francisco, Miami and Los Angeles.
Based on the 5,000 square foot exhibition of the same name created by EMP in partnership with the University of Washington, American Sabor: Latinos in U.S. Popular Music is a 2,500 square foot experience designed for smaller museums and cultural centers
Two films made specifically for the exhibition bring Latino music and dance to life. Each short film features performance footage and filmed interviews with artists and experts, and the narratives examine key events in the history of post-World War II Latino music. The Palladium Ballroom tells the story of New Yorks mythic 1950s dance hall, and the worldwide mambo craze created by the clubs performing stars, like Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez. A second film, also called American Sabor, features exclusive, highly illuminating interviews with stars of the Latin music scene, including salsa legends Johnny Pacheco and Willie Colón, virtuoso guitarist Carlos Santana, pop icon Herb Alpert, and the musicians who created San Antonios famed Westside Sound.
Guided listening stations allow visitors to listen closely to key artists and genresfrom salsa and Santana to San Antonio rhythm and blues. Expert commentary identifies elements such as ethnic roots, rhythmic patterns, form, texture, instruments, vocal style, and lyrics.
The exhibition comes with a fully operational juke box so that visitors can dance to their favorite rhythms.