Tag Archive for 'san diego salsa festival'

San Diego Salsa Festival Preview : Joel and Ana “Masacote”

Continuing our preview of the upcoming San Diego Salsa Festival, we have the amazing dancers of Sabor Masacote Dance Company. Joel and Ana Massicot (“Masacote”) provide an interesting new mix of salsa dance style since Joel comes from St. Croix (Virgin Islands) and Ana comes from Mexico. Sabor Masacote is a dance company comprised of six talented individuals that not only specialize in salsa (NY Style On 2), but also in other diverse dance disciplines, such as ballet, modern, and jazz. You can see a mix of all these dance styles in their choreography.

And here is Joel and Ana themselves social dancing at the same congress in 2005. For those bound to ask, the song is called ‘Salsa Buena’ by Frankie Ruiz.

Continue reading ‘San Diego Salsa Festival Preview : Joel and Ana “Masacote”’

San Diego Salsa Festival Preview : Magna Gopal

I wanted to make a quick re-announcement on how great this year’s San Diego Salsa Festival will be in September. This year we are extremely lucky to have Magna Gopal coming to teach and perform at the event. We have written numerous times about Magna before and her ability to spin, but I found a neat video showing her spinning over 45 times with Super Mario (not related to Nintendo).

Here is a great video of Shaka and Magna dancing at the Atlanta Salsa Congress. The best showcase of this dance couple is in their musicality. If you are ever get a chance, you must check out their workshops.

2008 San Diego Salsa Festival – Back Again!

San Diego Salsa Festival 2008 - Addicted2Salsa VersionIt’s back!!!! The 2nd Annual San Diego Salsa Festival, brought to you by Angel and Tulane Rivera in association with Albert Torres Productions, will be held September 19-21, 2008 at the Four Points Sheraton! We had so much fun at this event last year– the shows were amazing, there were workshops from the best dancers out there, and of course social dancing until the wee hours of dawn. There was a warm, unifying atmosphere all around, showing that this event will keep growing and be even more amazing this year!
They will have LIVE MUSIC by the band Lucky 7, music by Super DJ Robby and DJ Frank until 4am, not to mention over 40 WORKSHOPS, professional dance shows, and a COMPETITION which is a qualifier to the World Salsa Championships on ESPN.


Confirmed instructors:

Victor and Burju (Boston)
David and Jennifer (San Diego)
Silfredo La O Vigo
(Cuba)
Laura Mendoza
(San Diego)
Angel and Tulane
(San Diego)
Magna Gopal
(New Jersey)
Joel and Ana
(Boston)
Ricardo and Viviana
(Colombia)
…with many more to be confirmed!

Full event passes are already on sale at www.sandiegosalsafestival.com. Register for the hotel and event pass while you can! Check out the videos from last year’s San Diego Salsa Festival taken by our friends over at Nuevotec.

San Diego Salsa Festival 2007 - Joby Brava, Burju, Anthony Persaud, Pauline Lor San Diego Salsa Festival 2007 - Walter Jones, Black Power Ranger Salsa Latin Dance

Recapping the First Annual San Diego Salsa Festival 2007

Alas, the weekend is over! I don’t know about everyone else who attended, but I was exhausted on Monday!! Let’s talk about the venue, the people, the performances, the workshops, let’s talk about it ALL!

The Venue:
this year it was at the Four Points Sheraton off of Aero Drive. Overall, there was plenty of room to dance, convenient enough to be one story (with not having to wait for elevators, go up/down stairs), and cooling off was just a step outside (no corridors to have to walk through). I really liked that they had tables and chairs for everyone outside, where the bar was, so people could just hang out to cool off. That wasn’t the case at the other two congresses that I’ve attended. Also, plenty of free water and Rumba, the official energy drink of the San Diego Salsa Festival, hahaha.

The People: Social dancing was pretty good, a mix of on1/on2 dancers. There weren’t as many LA attendees as I had thought there would be (maybe for the SD on2 repertoire?). But I was pleasantly surprised and impressed by a handful of Mambo Inc. dancers, and of course the old school San Diegans. A couple of “known” salseros I danced with included Victor Perez (of Hacha Y Machete), and Iran Castillo (a local San Diego instructor of Son Y Pasos). I was also honored by a dance with Karlos, which you will probably see on nuevotec.com, soon since Allan was following us around with his bright camera light. I danced with Also had the opportunity to lead Anthony in Bachata, you can ask him about that one. Joshua of Joshua & Amaris from Vegas was a very nice lead as well. There weren’t as many people as there could have been, but with such a well-organized and great event put on by Angel and Tulane Rivera, I don’t doubt that next year will be even better. Hopefully, more people will discover how great San Diego is, and want to attend next year. Also, with it being a little smaller this year, there were more opportunities to dance with the greats.

The Performances: Some highlights (in no particular order) were Jayson Molina & Emily, Victor & Burju, Tito & Tamara, Jr and Emily, Joby & Paco, Josie & Hector, Majesty & Motion of San Diego, Al and Karla, Mambo Inc. of LA, and the Alma Latina Kids, who always deliver standing ovations each time. Jayson was supposed to dance with Griselle Ponce, but something came up with her, so he had to borrow Emily real quick and teach her a routine in about 40 min–amazing! Of course, Tito and Tamara had their ChaChas, wonderfully performed and well-danced. I absolutely love how into their dancing they get–they just look like they’re having the time of their lives. With couples like that, the chemistry they have is really apparent on stage. I was told by a source that it was because they’re Puerto Rican, haha. And well, I’d have to give it to Vic & Burju for my favorite performance of the weekend. That choreography looks amazing on video, but to see it in person, it’s breathtaking and reviving. Wow, they really love each other and their entire bodies move when they dance. If you’ve seen them in person, you know what I mean. They got a standing ovation as well. Performers came from Vegas, Utah, Wisconsin, LA, Orange County, Mexico, Puerto Rico, etc.

The Workshops: I wish I could tell you about more of the workshops, but with everything that happened, I attended only 2 and helped to teach one. Iran Castillo’s very advanced on2 class on Sunday was one, Vic and Burju’s Body Movement class was another, and then helped to teach an afternoon Bachata class with Carlos Hammond. Burju’s body movement class was A-MAZING. Absolutely AMAZING. I loved it–she’s a very sweet and funny person (we got to interview her and Joby), and her and Vic play off each other really well. You can tell they have a lot of fun! And Iran’s class, of course, was very challenging! I’ve heard people say that there should have been more variety in instructors, which I can support. But its also good because if you can’t attend one of their classes on one day, you can always attend the other one. As it is the first one, I think its a little harder to get a lot of instructors, as well as have funds for them.

Overall, it was well-organized, well-scheduled, and pretty good! Obviously, the promoters can definitely use this as a learning tool for next years. It was definitely a good start, and there weren’t any major complaints from me. Others may beg to differ. It is also up to the dancer to make the most of the opportunities available. Met some dancers that will also be attending SF congress, so it’ll be nice to look forward to some familiar faces in November. That’s why I love congresses–social networking! For those of you that came, I hope that you can spread the word about the event so that we can make San Diego a landmark for Congress, as it has great potential. And for those of you who weren’t able to attend, it’d be a great disservice to yourself not to come join us. Until the clave beats again…

Flare (aka Pauline)

1st San Diego Salsa Festival 2007 Nuevotec Review

Angel and Tulane Rivera interview“… Everybody else in the world or the country basically we’re saying that San Diego didn’t have a big enough salsa scene. And so my husband and I set out to prove them wrong, and prove them wrong we did.” – Tulane Rivera.

2007 marked the return of the large format event to San Diego with the 1st annual San Diego Salsa Festival. Others can add more insight, but the last large event in the beautiful city was held in 2005 (San Diego Congress). The quote from Tulane Rivera is in regards to the growing salsa community. That very community created the demand, and Angel and Tulane Rivera from A Time To Dance Studio (with Albert Torres Productions) helped fill the need. The married couple talked about their salsa experiences outside California, having themselves traveled to different parts of Europe and Asia. Anthony Persaud and Dr. Karlos Oregel interview“Getting out of your bubble … seeing another world” – Angel Rivera. So they focused on securing a few key performers (and instructors) outside of their area, including Hacha y Machete, Tito and Tamara and Jayson Molina from Puerto Rico. Additionally, the promoters also talked about the level of dancing in San Diego increasing dramatically, and that locals aren’t necessarily looking at L.A. anymore for its trends.

Burju Perez and Joby Martinez interviewWhile I wasn’t able to attend any classes, (from what I understand) the workshops were quite successful, with full passes almost selling out due to lack of physical workshop space. Of course, you could not have a San Diego event without its incredible local talent such as Majesty in Motion, Iran Castillo, Mario and Sarai, Salsa Divas, Juan and Susie, etc.

Steve Meyer, Laura Mendoza, and Iran Castillo social danceI was only able to attend the Saturday night party, and wish I could have extended my stay. When one’s camcorder lens instantly *fogs up* after immediately entering the main dance ballroom, one can make some simple observations – 1) There’s too many people dancing and 2) There’s not enough air conditioning and 3) the venue is too small. The venue was fairly large, and there was a massive amount of people social dancing filling the room up to capacity. Great turnout? You betcha. I also saw a few out of town social dancers from places such as NJ, NY, and Florida. The future looks bright for the 2008 festival, also in late September.

Ariel Perez and Burju Hurturk-Perez social dance