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Japanese Turns Saucy About Salsa Dancing
By Natalie Obiko Pearson, February 27, 2005
Tokyo --- A pulsating mambo fills the air at a cavernous
club near Tokyo Bay. ''Ayyy-esssooo!'' the song calls in exhortation
as a sea of dancers --- sweaty, skin bared, clothes clinging
--- roll their hips and swirl into turns with increasing abandon.
The scene is a world away from the formal and orderly Japan
that lies outside--- and that's exactly why these dancers
love it. Salsa, the catchall name for a variety of music and
dance with Latin and
Afro-Caribbean roots, such as the mambo, rumba and Cuban son,
has found an unlikely group of hard-core enthusiasts in Japan.
''It's like they've suddenly woken up. They're shocked by
the gap between their daily lives and life on the dance floor,''
says George Watabe, 56, an events producer credited as the
force behind Japan's salsa boom. ''It's a kind of revolution,
a mass rebellion.'' The signs of the boom in Japan are unmistakable.
The monthly ''120% Salsa'' has grown from a one-page flier
in 1996 to a full magazine with a circulation of about 40,000.
Its pages list 200 salsa-related events across Japan every
month. Music stores sport sizable collections of salsa CDs,
and salsa-based fitness classes are now standard at Japanese
gyms.
The salsa rebellion was in full swing in Tokyo when 3,400
people converged for the sixth annual Japan Salsa Congress
--- a three-day sweat fest devoted to the serious business
of dancing. And serious it is.
While salsa encourages dancing with abandon, Japanese fans
leave little to chance. At the event's boot camp, some took
notes and others recorded moves with video cameras so they
could study and master them at home. ''Japanese love to learn
and study things. Look at how they took to golf. It's the
same thing,'' says Chiaki Noji, a film production company
employee who danced at the salsa congress.
As with other hobbies in Japan, practitioners must dress
the part --- and money is no object.
Dancers can spend as much as $250 for an average pair of must-have
''salsa shoes'' with reinforced heels. Female fans drop hundreds
of dollars at tanning salons to achieve a ''sexy Latina''
look. Salsa's popularity in Japan coincides with a worldwide
Latin boom over the past decade, fueled by films like Wim
Wenders' 1999 documentary ''The Buena Vista Social Club''
and the success of singing stars like Ricky Martin. But many
say salsa has a special resonance in Japan because of its
dissonance with the wider society.
''Japanese are shy, and they tend to keep things pent up
inside. Listening to the music and moving the body is really
liberating,'' says Mayumi Iida, a 27-year-old office employee.
For some Japanese, salsa is more than just a hobby --- it's
a way of life. Ryoko Ohara, 31, lived for years under a dual
persona as ''Office Lady by Day, Salsa Queen by Night'' that
earned her the stage name ''OL Ryoko'' --- short for
''Office Lady Ryoko.'' She says salsa helped her escape long
working hours and the inflexibility of the
workplace. ''After I started salsa dancing, suddenly my life
became fun,'' she says.
Ohara quit her clerical job last summer and now dedicates
herself professionally to salsa, running three dance teams,
teaching and performing. Salsa literally means ''sauce'' in
Spanish, but as a dance it refers to the fiery passions the
music evokes that are like a rare seasoning --- piquant, provocative.
Part of its popularity is that it allows an open celebration
of sensuality that is unusual in Japan. ''Japanese are not
used to expressing their sexuality. Japanese culture doesn't
allow you to,'' says Miwa Asano, a salsa instructor in Tokyo.
She says that freedom appeals to many Japanese, especially
those in their late
20s and 30s who are seeking alternatives to traditional social
values. ''Salsa attracts people who are taking their happiness
into their own hands, who don't need a group,'' Asano says.
''Especially the women --- they come to class alone, they
go out to clubs alone. They are women who are OK going it
alone.''
Albert Torres, a major producer of salsa events worldwide,
thinks Japan's salsa scene is a reflection of larger changes
in society. When he began co-producing the Japan Salsa Congress
with Watabe six years ago, salsa was ''too sexual, too taboo,''
he says. He remembers dance teachers --- afraid of being stigmatized
--- hiding their salsa dancing from family and friends. But
now he sees attitudes changing in Tokyo. ''The Japanese have
really embraced it,'' he says. ''It's like night and day.
There's no comparison to six years ago. It's not the same
city.''