Takeshi Young June 21, 2022
One of the questions I frequently receive from my students is what is the difference between mambo vs salsa?
The question is tricky to answer, because “mambo” can mean different things in different contexts.
1) Palladium Mambo
Mambo was a music genre and dance that was originally created in Cuba, and popularized in New York City in the 1940s and 1950s.
The center for mambo dancing was the Palladium Ballroom in NYC, which attracted the best mambo musicians and dancers.
The style of dancing that originated in the Palladium is sometimes referred to as “Palladium mambo”.
The mambo that was danced in the Palladium is similar in many ways to salsa today, because salsa borrowed many of the steps from that dance.
Many modern salsa dancers also incorporate mambo styling into their salsa dancing to give it an old-school flavor, further blurring the lines between salsa and mambo.
2) New York Style Salsa
New York-style salsa evolved from mambo, and has the same timing as mambo with dancers breaking on the second beat of the music.

Because of this, the term “mambo” is sometime used as a synonym to New York-style salsa.
In fact, Eddie Torres who helped to formalize salsa dancing steps and teach them throughout the world, is often referred to as the “Mambo King”.
So in this case there is no difference between mambo and salsa, because the terms are being used interchangeably.
3) Ballroom Mambo
The term mambo is also used in the world of ballroom dance, where it is one the dances included in the American Rhythm category.
Like most ballroom dances, ballroom mambo is highly stylized, with sharp movements and flare similar to ballroom cha cha and rumba.
Ballroom mambo is also danced on1 (break step occuring on the first beat), as opposed to on2, so it is more similar to LA-style salsa, although the styling is distinctly ballroom.
So what is the difference between mambo and salsa?
In summary: Palladium mambo is very similar to New York-style salsa, and the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably. Ballroom mambo is danced on1 like LA-style salsa, but with ballroom dance styling.
Hope that helps clarify the difference between mambo vs salsa!
If you still have any questions about mambo or salsa, leave them in the comments!
Share this

Previous7 Facts You Didn’t Know About Salsa Dancing
NextWorld Salsa Summit Cancelled

About the author
Takeshi Young
Takeshi young is salsa dance instructor, choreographer and competitor with over 20 years of salsa dance experience. He is passionate about all things salsa and is the coach and director of the college salsa dance team, Spartan Mambo. Instagram YouTube Threads
Related Posts

Cuban Dance Styles: The Complete List

History of Salsa Dance

Latin Dances

7 Facts You Didn’t Know About Salsa Dancing
Leave a comment
Leave a Reply
https://jetpack.wordpress.com/jetpack-comment/?blogid=154231990&postid=1089&comment_registration=0&require_name_email=1&stc_enabled=1&stb_enabled=1&show_avatars=1&avatar_default=simple_local_avatar&greeting=Leave+a+Reply&jetpack_comments_nonce=90c4b724d4&greeting_reply=Leave+a+Reply+to+%25s&color_scheme=light&lang=en_US&jetpack_version=15.2&iframe_unique_id=1&show_cookie_consent=10&has_cookie_consent=0&is_current_user_subscribed=0&token_key=%3Bnormal%3B&sig=f54578f9c12975112d62c210ff019a1179b101a8#parent=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.salsavida.com%2Farticles%2Fdifference-between-mambo-vs-salsa%2F