Arcaño y sus Maravillas: The Cradle of the Mambo
The danzón charanga where the López brothers invented the "nuevo ritmo"
Pioneers1 min read2 citations
Inside one Havana danzón orchestra, two brothers lit a fuse that would explode into the mambo and the cha-cha-chá: Arcaño y sus Maravillas.[1]
A great charanga
Founded in 1937 by the flutist Antonio Arcaño, the Maravillas became one of the most popular and prolific danzón charangas in Cuba, active until 1958.[1] Its engine room was the López brothers — Orestes López on piano, cello, and bass, and his younger brother Israel "Cachao" López on bass — who together composed thousands of danzones.[1]
The nuevo ritmo
In the late 1930s the López brothers introduced the danzón de nuevo ritmo, adding a syncopated, improvisation-friendly section to the end of the rigid danzón form.[1] They called that section the mambo, and dancers loved the freedom it gave them — a small revolution that would grow into the fast mambo popularized by Pérez Prado and the cha-cha-chá created by Enrique Jorrín, a violinist who began his career in the Maravillas.[2]
Why it matters
Arcaño y sus Maravillas is where modern Cuban dance music turned a corner — proof that the elegant, formal danzón still held the seeds of the century's biggest dance crazes.[2] Without the Maravillas' nuevo ritmo, there is no mambo and no cha-cha-chá as we know them.[1]
References
- 1.Arcaño y sus Maravillas — Wikipedia, 2026
- 2.Danzón-mambo — Wikipedia, 2026