TomSchueler
Changui
Hope you forgive my clickbait in the title. This is more me trying to make sense of the fact that many people taking up salsa dancing are a little bit older.
So, let me give you the whole story.
I went to a concert the other day in a small city not too far away from Berlin, Germany. The band was of Cuban origin and played live, a few son and a lot of salsa.
Most people who attended the concert were more than fifty years old, only a few under the age of fourty, literally no one under the age of thirty. Same is my experience with Cuban salsa courses I took in the predominant schools in Berlin, mostly couples around the age of plus/minus fifty attended the courses, with the exeption of the salsa lessons offered as part of the local universities sports curriculum.
In the salsa clubs in Berlin it's a different story, you have a great mix of old and young, although the "cut" for women age-wise seems to lie around 40 and for men around the age of 50. A little sad is also that in the clubs, there are only very few young dancers under 20 (that might also be the case due to the fact people discover partner dancing later in life, in an age where they already have a steady partner to go dancing with).
My explanation for this observation is that salsa was, albeit very small, part of the German pop culture in the late 80s and early 90s but was was slowly fading in popularity at the end of the nineties. (According to Wikipedia, Salsa only reached Germany in the early 80s.)
People who are now fifty and older thus discovered salsa in the 80s and 90s, from the age of being a teenager on up to early adulthood, in an age where you're very open to new musical influences and perhaps interested in the Cuban culture or your stereotypes of it.
One reason the generation 50+ seems to be prevalent at concerts outside the bigger cities (and in salsa courses!) could be that salsa felt quite fresh and innovative in their youth and now, at an age where your kids are out of the house and there is more time for yourself, they want to re-create this feeling of exoticism and exitement salsa provided when they were of a younger age.
Did you discover the same phenomenon in your scene or is it way more varied than here? Do you believe salsa satisfied a need for exoticism and adventure in the 80s and 90s for the now 50+ generation?
So, let me give you the whole story.
I went to a concert the other day in a small city not too far away from Berlin, Germany. The band was of Cuban origin and played live, a few son and a lot of salsa.
Most people who attended the concert were more than fifty years old, only a few under the age of fourty, literally no one under the age of thirty. Same is my experience with Cuban salsa courses I took in the predominant schools in Berlin, mostly couples around the age of plus/minus fifty attended the courses, with the exeption of the salsa lessons offered as part of the local universities sports curriculum.
In the salsa clubs in Berlin it's a different story, you have a great mix of old and young, although the "cut" for women age-wise seems to lie around 40 and for men around the age of 50. A little sad is also that in the clubs, there are only very few young dancers under 20 (that might also be the case due to the fact people discover partner dancing later in life, in an age where they already have a steady partner to go dancing with).
My explanation for this observation is that salsa was, albeit very small, part of the German pop culture in the late 80s and early 90s but was was slowly fading in popularity at the end of the nineties. (According to Wikipedia, Salsa only reached Germany in the early 80s.)
People who are now fifty and older thus discovered salsa in the 80s and 90s, from the age of being a teenager on up to early adulthood, in an age where you're very open to new musical influences and perhaps interested in the Cuban culture or your stereotypes of it.
One reason the generation 50+ seems to be prevalent at concerts outside the bigger cities (and in salsa courses!) could be that salsa felt quite fresh and innovative in their youth and now, at an age where your kids are out of the house and there is more time for yourself, they want to re-create this feeling of exoticism and exitement salsa provided when they were of a younger age.
Did you discover the same phenomenon in your scene or is it way more varied than here? Do you believe salsa satisfied a need for exoticism and adventure in the 80s and 90s for the now 50+ generation?
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