We are happy to announce that we will be organizing one of the most eventful and exciting New Year’s eve parties to date. We want you to dance your way into a new and joyful year. Let’s make 2023 the year for dancing, happiness, and success.
– Before December 18, 30$. – Before December 30, 40$
– December 31st, 45$
Join us for Latin Groove’s End of Session Party on 19th May! Get ready for a night filled with dancing, partying, and unforgettable memories. Our amazing lineup includes Salsa, Bachata, Kizomba, reggaeton, and more, so come prepared to show off your moves! Don’t miss out on exciting shows and surprises! It’s time to celebrate with Latin Groove’s students, instructors, staff, and friends. Get your tickets now and secure your spot at Studio Latin Groove from 9 pm to 2 am.
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inspired by New York’s Palladium Ballroom known as “the home of the mambo”. The original Palladium in New York City was the place where this amazing fusion of Latin rhythms, American Jazz, and Swing came together and formed what we now call Mambo and Salsa
The original Palladium in New York City was the place where this amazing fusion of Latin rhythms, American Jazz, and Swing came together and formed what we now call Mambo and Salsa.
New York’s Palladium Ballroom is commonly revered as the birthplace of modern Latin dancing. Known as “the home of the mambo,” the Palladium was New York’s most popular venue for Latin dance music from 1947 to 1966 It featured live Latin music four nights a week, frequently played by “The Big Three” orchestras: Machito and his
Afrocubans, Tito Puente, and Tito Rodríguez. Located near prominent nightclubs and theaters at 53rd St. and Broadway, the Palladium was significant for bringing Latin music to midtown Manhattan and for the racial and ethnic integration it engendered.
Puerto Rican, Cuban, Italian, African-American, Irish, and Jewish patrons of all classes
filled its dance floors and rubbed elbows with celebrities, especially on ....
Wednesday nights when “Killer Joe” Piro hosted the popular mambo contest and professional show. The weekly show
launched the careers of many dance teams who then performed in Catskill and Miami Beach resorts, and worked as opening acts with touring musicians. Mambo was the favorite dance of Palladium regulars, but other dances experienced surges of popularity, including the cha-cha (1954) and pachanga (1961).
The original Palladium in New York City was the place where this amazing fusion of latin rhythms, American Jazz and Swing came together and formed what we now call Mambo and Salsa.
We, at “The Montreal palladium” would like to give tribute to this place that started this wonderfully infectious love of music and dancing and in which quickly traveled the globe and made the world, the largest dance floor.
No matter where you are from, no matter what your background is, no matter what your socioeconomic status is, everyone can dance and be part of this community.
Latin music has gone through lots of fusions and styles over the years combining, jazz, funk, rythme and blues, rock, pop, traditional music and modern yet shows no signs of ever stopping. Why? Because it simply feels good!
The Montreal Palladium would like to invite you for some latin dancing.
Bienvenido.
You loved all of our parties and nightlife events, and we listened, we have given birth to the old but new Montreal Palladium, a place where magic and dancing mix in harmony.
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Montreal Palladium,
design and develop by Onixx Media
All right reserved Copyright ©
Montreal Palladium,
design and develop by Onixx Media