• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Search
  • Things To Do in NYC
  • Art
  • Dance
  • Festivals
  • Film
  • Music
  • Sports
  • Theatre
New York Latin Culture Magazine®

New York Latin Culture Magazine®

World-class Indigenous, European & African Culture since 2012

  • New York
  • Latin
  • Culture
  • Magazine
  • Subscribe
  • Sponsor

Arsenio Rodríguez, “El Ciego Maravilloso,” Developed Son Montuno and the Conjunto, the Template for Salsa, Songo, and Timba


Arsenio Rodríguez “El Ciego Maravilloso” (The Marvelous Blind One, 1911-1970) was a Cuban tres player, composer and bandleader whose Africanization of son montuno Cuban folk music and development of the conjunto band format to support the richer sound, laid the foundations for Latin jazz and salsa.

What Rodríguez did in the 1930s and 40s was done again by Chucho Valdés in Cuba by his band Irakere in the 1970s when they evolved Cuban son into timba.

FANIA All-Star Larry Harlow’s nickname “El Judio Marvilloso” (The Marvelous Jew) is a reference to Rodríguez. Harlow studied music in Cuba and was heavily influenced by Rodríguez. Salsa, the salsa dura of FANIA and others in the 1970s has much more Africa in it than salsa does today.

A Son of Matanzas

Arsenio Rodríguez (Vic/Adobe)
Arsenio Rodríguez (Vic/Adobe)

Rodríguez was born in Güira de Macurijes, Matanzas, Cuba on August 31, 1911. Matanzas is the home of rumba. He was blinded as a child after a horse kicked him in the head. That’s how he later got his nickname “El Ciego Maravilloso” (The Marvelous Blind One). But when you lose one sense, the others strengthen. He became a master tres player (Cuban guitar).

A Son of Kongo

His family was Kongo which is more Central African than the West African cultures which dominate the Caribbean. We keep reading about Kongo musicians, everywhere in the Caribbean.

Most human culture began as rituals of faith, community and matchmaking. The rhythms in Rodríguez came from the Orisha faiths Palo Monte or Las Reglas de Congo. Certain rhythms and dances are only done in celebrations of faith, and have been done the same way since the beginning of human time.

He started as a tumbadora player (the Cuban bass drum) in family and community gatherings, and learned to play the tres.

Son Montuno

The son of Eastern Cuba, of which Buena Vista Social Club is the best known modern example, has a softer, more balladic sound. It’s the first blend of African rhythms with Spanish guitar. Rodríguez brought back the rhythmic emphasis and syncopation. European music is on the downbeat. Afro-Caribbean music is on the upbeat. It’s syncopated. That’s also a Haitian Diaspora influence.

The German baroque composer Bach excelled at counterpoint, the blending of two separate melodic lines, and contrapuntal music, the blending of multiple lines with some sharing of the melody. You hear this in jazz. Someone establishes the melody. You play a little of it and add your thing before coming back and handing the melody to someone else, and so on. Meanwhile everyone is playing along, but it all fits together.

Rodríguez wrote contrapuntal parts into son montuno with a strong beat. Dancers love it. A good dancer can dance two rhythms in their body at the same time. A really good dancer may keep more rhythms going at the same time. It’s an African thing. Try it. It’s really hard. It requires two or three brains.

Arsenio Rodríguez, a Master of Both Rhythm and Melody

That’s Arsenio’s rhythmic training as a drummer, and his skill with melody as a tres player. If you’ve ever spent time in a rainforest, it’s the sound of the rainforest. There are all these different creatures doing their own thing, but it all blends together into the most beautiful natural symphony. That is Latin music.

To play his unique vision, Rodríguez needed more instruments. He added conga drums and expanded the rhythm section and added more trumpets to create the Latin front line.

Bruca maniguá

Rodríguez rose to prominence with his composition “Bruca maniguá” sung by Miguelito Valdés with Orquesta Casino de la Playa in 1937. The song, which was a cry for freedom, was an international hit. “Yo soy Carabali” is a reference to the Calabar River delta at the Nigerian border with Cameroon. The popular Carabalí Rainforest Park in Puerto Rico must be a similar reference.

Listen to it. Here’s the original hit recording. Notice how slow the tempo is and the orchestral influences. This is early Rodríguez.

Listen to this later version by the original singer. Here the son montuno form of salsa is easily recognizable.

Orquesta Casino was a bridge from Cuban dance music to American big band jazz. It was one of those orchestras that developed many artists who went on to their own fame. For example, Dámaso Pérez Prado (Mambo No. 5) played and arranged in the band for a while before going on to fame in Mexico. That may be the basis of Rodríguez’ claim to be the true originator of mambo.

Arsenio Rodríguez Popularizes the Conjunto

In 1940, Rodríguez started his own band. It wasn’t the first conjunto, but it became the most popular one.

New York City and the Mambo Craze

He began visiting New York City in 1947 and moved here in 1952. He got to play with Latin jazz legends Mario Bauzá and Machito, and Chano Pozo and Dizzy Gillespie through the height of the Mambo Craze out of the Palladium Ballroom.

When the Mambo Craze faded, he moved to Los Angeles for a new start and died there in 1970. The maestro is buried at Ferncliff Cemetery in Woodlands, just west of White Plains.

Before and After Arsenio Rodríguez

What Arsenio Rodríguez did in Cuba in the 1940s became the salsa of New York City in the 1970s. In the same way that there was jazz before Louis Armstrong and jazz after Louis Armstrong, there was Latin music before Arsenio Rodríguez and after Arsenio Rodríguez.


Published August 29, 2024 ~ Updated August 29, 2024.

Filed Under: Cuban, Legends, MUSIC, Salsa, Son Cubano

Subscribe

Get New York Latin Culture Magazine weekly in your email. We don’t share, rent, or sell addresses. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Primary Sidebar

Things to Do in NYC

January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December

Spanish Classical Music

Teatro Real, Royal Opera of Madrid Orchestra Gala Musical Fantasy From Spain (Teatro Real)

Teatro Real, the Royal Opera of Madrid Orchestra, Plays a Gala Musical Fantasy From Spain Featuring Violinist María Dueñas, Soprano Saioa Hernández, and Conductor David Afkham

African, Middle Eastern, Latin American Film

Nova Frontier Film Festival (Harlem Stage)

Nova Frontier Film Festival Screens Films of the African Diaspora, Middle East, and Latin America with Talk, Live Music and Community at Harlem Stage

Nuestros Sonidos Latin Culture

Nuestros Sonidos at Carnegie Hall (Sol Cotti)

Carnegie Hall’s “Nuestros Sonidos” (Our Sounds) Festival of Latin Culture

Theatre Professionals ~ Employers Network

Find your next project. Discover your next team. Do it on RISE.

Sponsored By The Best Of New York

92nd Street Y, New York

Capulli Mexican Dance Company 🇲🇽

Brooklyn Museum

Carnegie Hall

Harlem Stage

Hostos Center

Melvis Santa & Jazz Orishas 🇨🇺

Metropolitan Opera

National Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Parade 🇺🇸

New York City Center

NYU Skirball Center

RISE Theatre Directory

Teatro Real ~ Royal Opera of Madrid 🇪🇸

World Music Institute

Footer

Search

Things to do in NYC

January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December

New York City

Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, Staten Island ~ New Jersey

Latin Music and Dance

Bachata, Ballet, Cumbia, Classical, Flamenco, Hip Hop, House, Jazz, Merengue, Modern Dance, Opera, Pop, Reggaeton, Regional Mexican, Rock, Salsa, Samba, Tango, World Music

North American

African American, Honduran, Indigenous, Jewish, Mexican

Caribbean

Cuban, Dominican, Haitian, Puerto Rican, Trinidadian

South American

Argentine, Bolivian, Brazilian, Chilean, Colombian, Ecuadorian, Peruvian, Venezuelan

African

African American, Nigerian, South African

European

French, Portuguese, Spanish

Follow

X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Threads, YouTube, TikTok

Subscribe

Get New York Latin Culture Magazine in your email

advertise

Sponsor

Details

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Cookies Policy

New York Latin Culture Magazine® and Tango Beat® are registered trademarks, and New York Latin Culture™ is a trademark of Keith Widyolar. Other marks are the property of their respective holders.

Copyright © 2012–2025 New York Latin Culture Magazine®. All Rights Reserved.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we assume you are ok with it.Ok