Looking back to that era, perhaps if Mr. Lee had foreseen the future, had recognized the potential of a Chinese/Latin jazzy combination for his restaurants on that afternoon when Julio Andino, José Mangual and I with other guys were auditioning there for a “job on Broadway,” playing “Cachita” as a wild rumba for the happy customers, perhaps Mr. Lee would not have come up and asked us, “Please play American fox trots.”
Chinese Rhumba
When the old La Conga on West 51st Street became the China Doll overnight, the “rhumba-nik” crowd became quite concerned. Was their favorite club losing its Afro-Cuban flavor in favor of some Oriental concoction?
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2 comments:
This is an interesting perspective on the economics of nightclubs surrounding Latin music. I never would have expected the popularizatin of Chinese restuarants to effect the Latin Dance scene. I'd be curious to know how seriously this changed the amount of work bands were getting. And what happened to La Conga/The China Doll?
Thanks for your great posts, it really brings that NY era alive for me!
Hi Chip -- I think that in the era Vince was writing about, the '40s, the Latin dance scene was roaring uptown and in Spanish clubs but very much a novelty in midtown among the non-Latin crowd (which included many Jews). That novelty factor would keep clubs hot or not, and thus impact the musicians performing there. But in this era in New York, work was plentiful for musicians who could play Latin.
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