Mambo Dance Classes & Mambo Dance Lessons
In Los Angeles
Learn how to Dance the Mambo with fun and easy Mambo Dance Classes and Mambo Dance Lessons in Los Angeles
Want to take a great Mambo dance class in Los Angeles? Well you have come to the right place! By Your Side Dance Studio provides fun and enjoyable Mambo dance lessons and Mambo dance classes in Los Angeles that improve your dance skills and make you look great on the dance floor!
Professional Mambo Dance Lessons Tailored To Your Specific Needs
By Your Side Dance Studio provides professional Mambo dance lessons in a private setting so that you receive one-on-one personal Mambo dance instruction custom tailored to your particular needs. We also provide Mambo dance lessons as group classes.
Learn how to dance the Mambo at the Best Mambo Dance Class in Los Angeles
Just read some of our testimonials to find out why we have the best mambo dance class in Los Angeles providing the best Mambo dance instruction in Los Angeles.
Mambo Dancing
The mambo is a very popular and sensual dance, with African and Cuban rhythms. But where did the mambo come from?
Born in Cuba with traces of Haitian culture and influenced by American jazz, the mambo became a Latin ballroom dance craze that swept the globe and became exceedingly popular in Latin countries as well as the United States. The name of the dance is rooted in African culture, with connections to voodoo religion in Haiti.
Mambo’s origin lies in the early 1900′s in Cuba. Oresta Lopez, a composer and cellist, created a piece known as the mambo which mixed everyday Cuban rhythms with the African and South American rhythms. The result was a new fusion, and one that supported a continuous beat.
Mambo became ever more popular when Prado Perez, a famous bandleader and a friend to Lopez, marketed his music under the name “mambo.” It contained big brass and drum sound, and incorporated fast beats and runs on the instruments. In 1951, Perez Prado and his Orchestra took a tour of the United States, establishing Perez as a mambo king and mambo’s as America’s latest craze.
The basic Mambo step is derived from the Cuban style Rumba. The basic Cuban style Rumba uses a “Diamond Pattern” instead of the “American Square or Box” pattern, basically meaning forward and back and side to side. And that the steps are 2,3,4 instead of the 1,2,3 as in the Rumba. When dancing the mambo with a partner, many couples strive for a sensual romantic feeling. The mambo is quite different form other dances because it is very sensual instead of dramatic.
Now is the time to learn how to dance the Mambo!
Call us today to take a Mambo dance class or Mambo dance lesson
Telephone: 310-391-0400
- By Your Side Dance Studio
- 12613 Washington Blvd.
- Los Angeles, CA (West Culver City) 90066
Learn how to dance the Mambo!
We offer:
- Mambo dancing classes
- Private Mambo dancing lessons
- Custom tailored Mambo dance instruction
Looking for where to learn how to dance the Mambo in Los Angeles?
We have the best Mambo dance class in Los Angeles providing Mambo dance lessons, Mambo dance classes and Mambo dance instruction for Los Angeles and the surrounding areas including Acton, Adelanto, Agoura Hills, Alhambra,, Altadena, Anaheim, Arcadia, Artesia, Atwood, Avalon, Azusa, Baldwin Park, Bell, Bell Gardens, Bellflower, Beverly Hills, Bloomington, Brandeis, Brea, Buena Park, Burbank, Calabasas, Camarillo, Canoga Park, Canyon Country, Capistrano Beach, Carson, Cerritos, Chatsworth, Chino, Chino Hills, City of Industry, Claremont, Compton, Corona, Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa, Covina, Culver City, Cypress, Diamond Bar, Downey, Duarte, East Irvine, El Monte, El Segundo, El Toro, Encino, Fillmore, Fontana, Foothill Ranch, Fountain Valley, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Gardena, Glendale, Glendora, Granada Hills, Guasti, Hacienda Heights, Harbor City, Hawaiian Gardens, Hawthorne, Hermosa Beach, Huntington Beach, Huntington Park, Inglewood, Irvine, La Canada Flintridge, La Crescenta, La Habra, La Mirada, La Palma, La Puente, La Verne, Ladera Ranch, Laguna Beach, Lake Elsinore, Lake Forest, Lake Hughes, Lakewood, Lawndale, Littlerock, Llano, Lomita, Long Beach, Los Alamitos, Los Angeles, Lynwood, Lytle Creek, Malibu, Manhattan Beach, Mar Vista, Marina del Rey, Monterey Park, Moorpark, Pasadena, Redondo Beach, San Fernando, Santa Clarita, Simi Valley and Thousand Oaks.
