Festival and Travel Planner 2026

I was actually looking for that "marathon-style" to check if I like it but didn't find it in Prague: the music was festival-norm,
Like I have said before it is hard for me to perceive what marathon-style. Not another name for new agey dancing. As I have said the difference that I found dancing with the festival crowd was that distinct feel of weight transfer on the break. When dancing with on2 crowd trained in NYC tradition there is a fraction more time and pressure on the break step, especially the forward break step. Dancing with the festival crowd in EU, had a feel similar to dancing on1 but instead breaking on2.

Being really sweaty but ignoring it and immediately asking for the next dance indicates something is off.
Weren't people changing? If attire was more casual, it is easier to change.


 
For myself I also lately changed my attitude by no more dancing many dances in a row: not only for saving energy but also to get out of this greedy consumer attitude. I had this greedy attitude after covid ban, but you don't enjoy more by consuming more. After a really good dance I take a break and let it sink. In Prague it was also fun watching others dance as the the dance level was so high. Being really sweaty but ignoring it and immediately asking for the next dance indicates something is off.

Strangely the organizer wrote in the chat on friday that the nice venue would require a more elegant dress - that was when everybody was on travel already, and people commented this note came too late. Anyway I suppose marathon people are not into dressing up indeed. Also there is no real start of evening as it is continuous.
I like that consumption analogy a lot - and for me, personally, I've rarely felt "greedy" in the way that I needed to dance one song after another because I always felt that breaks between songs are beneficial for me: sometimes simply due to lack of stamina, but mainly also because I get easily overstimulated and feel like I need that reset between dances. My greed came in more in form in not wanting to leave until the very last song, because who knows what I might have missed - FOMO. Nowadays I'm usually quite happy if I had a couple of really nice dances already, I don't need to wait for that one more and can just call it quits for the night.
Again, I absolutely understand we're all very different and have heterogenous tastes and priorities, but I, personally, would always want to distinguish between day and night dancing in my attire - there were plenty of girls who wore essentially the same outfit at all times, just in different colors: some athletic pants and top or a unitard, for me personally that's a missed opportunity :D But yes, reminding people a few days or even hours prior to the event os definitely too late for most.
 
Weren't people changing? If attire was more casual, it is easier to change.
I think many or probably most were, but still, it was a lot of dancing - some seem to have made a point of wanting to use all the available dancing time, so how many shirts would you have to pack to dance from midday to 6 in the morning? :wacky: Also, without wanting to hurt anyone's feelings, I guess there just comes a point where a simple shirt change just won't be enough...
 
I think many or probably most were, but still, it was a lot of dancing - some seem to have made a point of wanting to use all the available dancing time, so how many shirts would you have to pack to dance from midday to 6 in the morning? :wacky: Also, without wanting to hurt anyone's feelings, I guess there just comes a point where a simple shirt change just won't be enough...

I'd be happy if there would be some objective measures for many things - and those measures would be visible, like decibels for loudness to convince DJs (and others) that it's too loud/quiet; special wristbands for those who don't wash hands, and smell detectors.
Smell is the hardest, because some of us are super sensitive to it, some smoke their receptors into ignorance. And our sensitivity is logarithmically (sp?) adjusting.
 
Shows at 17:00 seem to be a new format, last year the shows were at around 23:00.

The afternoon socials were fun, mixed music (Salsa,Timba, Bachata) (a bit cold outside) The dancing level at this event is quite low, to get better dances you will need to dance with the artists, but they are pretty busy dancing among themselves and doing animations. If you go with low expectations you might have a lot of fun.

Short notes.

Shows, I didn't see but bunch of "artists" got on the stage during Tromboranga concert, which kinda spoiled it. Also they didn't play their own songs, but Hector Lavoe covers. There was featuring singer from Venecuela with weird voice, but he had good energy and stage presence. Later I learned that it's his job to be fake Lavoe.

Pinto Picasso I also didn't see, but from what I know it was big spherical dude doing karaoke in high pitched voice for half an hour and talking to people for half an hour. No regrets of missing that, preparties were awesome.

Finishing about voice issues there was high pitched Farid in microphone as well. And Bersy sang so much it was hard to talk next day. Me too, but I slept more.

Workshops, I saw 5 minutes Bersy, she was good. And 5 minutes reggaeton. Good attendance: salsa older crowd, bachata younger.
Sound was good, but too loud at the end. I've noticed it in many events recently so maybe DJs ears are going old and mine. Or could be they're turning volume up all the time and as dancefloor empties people don't soak it up any more.

Now back to Tromboranga, who ever complained about people playing percussion in parties. We had that 3 days and mostly professional musicians and DJs, but not only. One day Palo Pa La Campana started to play and I was looking for a partner. Then I heard intricate cowbell solo which was so fitting song that I looked who's doing it. I went to dance to other side of the room not to get distracted. This is one of many festivals that were saved by Tromboranga.

Music selection I liked, with exception of Fabrizio Zoro, Italian salsa and salsa remixes probably deserve separate thread. It was not very bad, but I did go to sleep early on Saturday because of that. Also last sets 5-6am+ were usually filled with romantica, but that I understand; they want to clear room to clean room.

Dance level ranged from very low - like no rhythm, need support to stand upright, no idea which leg is which, to very high. There were plenty of good Bulgarian and Romanian dancers as well as from other countries, but it took me days to find them. Also as @Peutetre wrote, a lot of artists and many of them are good dancers. I think if you just took one hour snapshots from event you'd might have opposite opinions, the dancer quality shifted every hour. There was also dynamic with many bachata dancers. I didn't go there, but many people switched rooms and I guess if bachata party went bad, salsa party improved, and other way around.

I discovered new very high level Greek dancer, she was in such demand, that I didn't get to talk much until Sunday. Then turns out she's on the festival posters, lol. Anyway there were enough really good dancers for me to have fun. There were also real artists on the dancefloor, they put up a dance for me, with me, with singing and emotions.

People danced all styles of salsa and it didn't seem to be a problem. Floorcraft was not very good, in general in Southern Europe people don't seem to care about that. I had to push out of the slot camera people, photographers, "artists", etc. Especially around stage there were weird areas, but you've probably seen that in videos.

Weather was cold and a bit rainy. It was bad for beach, but kept dancefloor cool, since it had big doors opening to terrace.

Daily socials were also very good, at times better than night.

I wouldn't go to this festival, if not for live bands. Too expensive, too remote. Zagreb marathon would be of much much higher dancing level, I believe. Since it was my second trip to Bulgaria, I mixed Revolution in and did touristy and vacation things, so overall it was very good experience.
 
When dancing with on2 crowd trained in NYC tradition there is a fraction more time and pressure on the break step, especially the forward break step. Dancing with the festival crowd in EU, had a feel similar to dancing on1 but instead breaking on2.
IME a lot of UK on2 dancers feel like on1 dancers, I think there's a lot of crossover with EU scene. I've been dancing a lot more son recently and much prefer true contratiempo timing. I long to find an event which is more mambo, more durable. I'm sick of wafty romantica.
 
Bathrooms: probably the cleanest and nicest I've experienced at a salsa event (don't know about you, but to me this is kinda important). They even thought of the good old tradition to sit on the stage/around the DJ booth and equipped that are with cushions (there were enough regular chairs and little couches in addition to that in the main ballroom).
I had to reread 4 times to realize those 2 sentences are not related
 
Shows, I didn't see but bunch of "artists" got on the stage during Tromboranga concert, which kinda spoiled it. Also they didn't play their own songs, but Hector Lavoe covers. There was featuring singer from Venecuela with weird voice, but he had good energy and stage presence. Later I learned that it's his job to be fake Lavoe.
The concert was specifically announced as a Lavoe-tribute. I didn't know that Tromboranga would be playing (found out when I saw Joaquin was there before the show), I just assumed Amado would bring some band based in Venezuela with him. There was a problem with the sound level during the first 2 songs (his mic was too low), luckily they fixed it promptly.
The concert was good but the artists indeed kinda spoiled it, especially Bersy who just had to spend a third of her time on stage actually twerking (not the first time she has done that either).

Pinto Picasso I also didn't see, but from what I know it was big spherical dude doing karaoke in high pitched voice for half an hour and talking to people for half an hour.
He didn't really talk that much. His show was the same as he did at Istanbul festival in March - 1 hours singing over a backing track with soft pre-recorded vocals. Which is pretty standard for bachata concerts - DaniJ does the same thing.

Dance level ranged from very low - like no rhythm, need support to stand upright, no idea which leg is which, to very high. There were plenty of good Bulgarian and Romanian dancers as well as from other countries, but it took me days to find them. Also as @Peutetre wrote, a lot of artists and many of them are good dancers. I think if you just took one hour snapshots from event you'd might have opposite opinions, the dancer quality shifted every hour. There was also dynamic with many bachata dancers. I didn't go there, but many people switched rooms and I guess if bachata party went bad, salsa party improved, and other way around.
I shifted between the rooms (I estimate 60% salsa, 40% bachata) and I did not notice that much of a dynamic - attendance was influenced more by the time of night than anything else. For what it's worth, other than the artists (I don't dance with artists on purpose) I was disappointed with the level of the foreign followers - both ElSol and Istanbul had far better followers (and Magic almost certainly as well, but I cannot be objective there as I didn't really like Magic as an event). That is valid for salsa and for bachata for Istanbul.
The attendance of World Stars has definitely dropped over the last few years I have not attended, it used to be maybe 20+% more people.

I wouldn't go to this festival, if not for live bands. Too expensive, too remote.
Next year it's not going to be at Albena (most likely will move it to Turkey). I estimate they will lose 70-80% of Bulgarians attending but will probably be able to make it back with (turkish) locals and more foreigners.
 
anything interesting in Europe through June till mid July other than Rovinj/HSSF? Hopefully with outdoor dancing, salsa romantica and some bachata, long parties, hopefully 4+ night parties. Gotta keep my options open since flights are not exactly reliable...
 
Like I have said before it is hard for me to perceive what marathon-style. Not another name for new agey dancing. As I have said the difference that I found dancing with the festival crowd was that distinct feel of weight transfer on the break. When dancing with on2 crowd trained in NYC tradition there is a fraction more time and pressure on the break step, especially the forward break step. Dancing with the festival crowd in EU, had a feel similar to dancing on1 but instead breaking on2.


Weren't people changing? If attire was more casual, it is easier to change.
100% on1 converts almost never feel the same and I prefer those who started on2 as a beginner.
 
Short notes.

Shows, I didn't see but bunch of "artists" got on the stage during Tromboranga concert, which kinda spoiled it. Also they didn't play their own songs, but Hector Lavoe covers. There was featuring singer from Venecuela with weird voice, but he had good energy and stage presence. Later I learned that it's his job to be fake Lavoe.

Pinto Picasso I also didn't see, but from what I know it was big spherical dude doing karaoke in high pitched voice for half an hour and talking to people for half an hour. No regrets of missing that, preparties were awesome.

Finishing about voice issues there was high pitched Farid in microphone as well. And Bersy sang so much it was hard to talk next day. Me too, but I slept more.

Workshops, I saw 5 minutes Bersy, she was good. And 5 minutes reggaeton. Good attendance: salsa older crowd, bachata younger.
Sound was good, but too loud at the end. I've noticed it in many events recently so maybe DJs ears are going old and mine. Or could be they're turning volume up all the time and as dancefloor empties people don't soak it up any more.

Now back to Tromboranga, who ever complained about people playing percussion in parties. We had that 3 days and mostly professional musicians and DJs, but not only. One day Palo Pa La Campana started to play and I was looking for a partner. Then I heard intricate cowbell solo which was so fitting song that I looked who's doing it. I went to dance to other side of the room not to get distracted. This is one of many festivals that were saved by Tromboranga.

Music selection I liked, with exception of Fabrizio Zoro, Italian salsa and salsa remixes probably deserve separate thread. It was not very bad, but I did go to sleep early on Saturday because of that. Also last sets 5-6am+ were usually filled with romantica, but that I understand; they want to clear room to clean room.

Dance level ranged from very low - like no rhythm, need support to stand upright, no idea which leg is which, to very high. There were plenty of good Bulgarian and Romanian dancers as well as from other countries, but it took me days to find them. Also as @Peutetre wrote, a lot of artists and many of them are good dancers. I think if you just took one hour snapshots from event you'd might have opposite opinions, the dancer quality shifted every hour. There was also dynamic with many bachata dancers. I didn't go there, but many people switched rooms and I guess if bachata party went bad, salsa party improved, and other way around.

I discovered new very high level Greek dancer, she was in such demand, that I didn't get to talk much until Sunday. Then turns out she's on the festival posters, lol. Anyway there were enough really good dancers for me to have fun. There were also real artists on the dancefloor, they put up a dance for me, with me, with singing and emotions.

People danced all styles of salsa and it didn't seem to be a problem. Floorcraft was not very good, in general in Southern Europe people don't seem to care about that. I had to push out of the slot camera people, photographers, "artists", etc. Especially around stage there were weird areas, but you've probably seen that in videos.

Weather was cold and a bit rainy. It was bad for beach, but kept dancefloor cool, since it had big doors opening to terrace.

Daily socials were also very good, at times better than night.

I wouldn't go to this festival, if not for live bands. Too expensive, too remote. Zagreb marathon would be of much much higher dancing level, I believe. Since it was my second trip to Bulgaria, I mixed Revolution in and did touristy and vacation things, so overall it was very good experience.
Interestingly, Terry stopped going to that event because Bersy was singing over many of the songs when she took the mic.
 
Live2Mambo is making changes next year (2027) .

1st weekend venue has been changed from Novotel to the Ethnographic museum.

This will cut capacity down to 250 for the 1st weekend since Ethnographic museum is a lot smaller than Novotel.

A questionable change IMO, as Novotel could easily accomodate 750 people (more like 1000+) and it also took the pressure off of going to Anantara Hotel as you could choose between two very good and spacious venues.

Ethnographic museum is nice, but small. Was there in the summer with 150-ish people at TheDanceHub event and it was perfect for a small cozy event, but Live2Mambo is not meant to be cozy.

This means the 2nd weekend at Anantara will still be completely packed.
 
Last edited:
On the other side 250 is probably largest you can make an event with really good social dancing.
Live bands is the only excuse I can find to make event bigger that would improve the vibes.
 
On the other side 250 is probably largest you can make an event with really good social dancing.


True, but the weekend with 250 capacity is billed as the 'workshop' weekend with a heavy artist lineup and has shortened social hours with parties ending at 4:30am. So who exactly is this for?
 
Live2Mambo is making changes next year (2027) .

1st weekend venue has been changed from Novotel to the Ethnographic museum.

This will cut capacity down to 250 for the 1st weekend since Ethnographic museum is a lot smaller than Novotel.

A questionable change IMO, as Novotel could easily accomodate 750 people (more like 1000+) and it also took the pressure off of going to Anantara Hotel as you could choose between two very good and spacious venues.

Ethnographic museum is nice, but small. Was there in the summer with 150-ish people at TheDanceHub event and it was perfect for a small cozy event, but Live2Mambo is not meant to be cozy.

This means the 2nd weekend at Anantara will still be completely packed.
Because of a scheduling conflict next year I will need to go for the first weekend for the first time. For me personally I like this change, but I'm surprised. The people I spoke liked it at Novotel. I wonder if it is an intrinsic decision for strategic reasons or something external.
 
Because of a scheduling conflict next year I will need to go for the first weekend for the first time. For me personally I like this change, but I'm surprised. The people I spoke liked it at Novotel. I wonder if it is an intrinsic decision for strategic reasons or something external.
Weren't there a lot of issues last year with salseros not behaving in the way the hotel desired/expected? I remember seeing numerous posts on the Dancehouse profile asking people to follow certain rules, down to a point where it was mentioned the event might not be able to continue if things do not improve because other guests felt bothered. I didn't pay attention though as to which hotel and which weekend this was about.
 
Weren't there a lot of issues last year with salseros not behaving in the way the hotel desired/expected? I remember seeing numerous posts on the Dancehouse profile asking people to follow certain rules, down to a point where it was mentioned the event might not be able to continue if things do not improve because other guests felt bothered. I didn't pay attention though as to which hotel and which weekend this was about.

That happened at Anantara this year. But that weekend/venue isn't going to change.

As to why the Novotel venue has changed, I have no idea. The organizer says it's to keep things fresh. Very weird to change up the format considering how popular it was.

Imposing a 250 limit seems very small for such a popular event.
 
Back
Top