Note: Like Jet on 11th August, OK was recorded as the name of dance in 1966 (Vol.30, No.18, p.63): Joints to understand the Boogaloo dance boom. "A series of single and albums released as Flamingos in 1966 and 1967," The Boogaloo Party "(advertisement advertised on January 22, 1966) Wayne Logiudice's" Ow! Boogaloo "(advertisement) was released on July 9, 1966," Latin Boogaloo "(advertisement published on October 15, 1966) of Pete Rodriguez Conjunto, Boogaloo Blues (Cotique) recording company of Johnny Colon, and Richie Ray and Bobby's Jala Jala and Boogaloo Cruz (Allegri Records) note that Boogaloo is the stage name of the 1950s cast and composer Kent Harris (born 1930) October 1956 Billboard ads released on the 20th include Harris' s "Cops and Robbers" and "Clothes Line (Wrap It Up)" by Boogaloo and His Gallant Crew.
Boogaloo or bugalú (or shing-a-ling, Latin boogaloo, Latin R & B) is Latin music and dance popular in America in the 1960's. Boogaloo was born in New York City and is mainly teen Latin American. This style is in harmony with popular African-American rhythm and blues (R & B), Mambo and son Montourno's soul music, and English and Spanish songs. The American recital TV program introduced dance and music to American mainstream audience. From the 1950's to the 1960's, American African Americans were listening to various styles of music such as jumping blues, R & B, doo-wop and so on. Hispanics in New York have these preferences, but they also listen to genres like Mambo and Chacha Cha. Mixtures of Puerto Rican, Cubans, African American, and other clubs.
The word boogaloo was created by Riichi Ray and Bobby Cruz around 1966. The biggest carnival in the 1960s was "Bang Bang" by Joe Cuba Sextet, and in 1966 there was over 1 million copies sold. Popular songs from other groups include JohnnyColón's "Boogaloo Blues", PeteRodríguez's "I Like It that that", and Héctor Rivera's "At the Party". On the same day that Joe Cuba 's pop music succeeded in 1966, the palladium banquet hall in New York was closed and the hometown of Big Band Mambo has lost his liquor license for many years. Close showed the end of the mainstream Mambo, and Boogaloo dominated the Latin chart for several years before Salsa began to take over. At the same time, other rhythmic inventions are in progress. Deng, Jarajara, and Thin Ring are branches of Mambo and Chacha.