
La Bamba sounds like pure joy: three chords, a shout, a dance, and a chorus almost everyone knows.But before it became a rock and roll classic, La Bamba lived in the son jarocho tradition of Veracruz: a world of wooden platforms, dancing feet, weddings, gatherings, Spanish strings, Indigenous themes, Caribbean circulation, and African-rooted rhythm. In that world, dance was not decoration. The dancers’ feet struck the tarima, and the floor became an instrument.This episode follows the song from Veracruz to the recording age, through El Jarocho and Andrés Huesca, and then to Ritchie Valens, who transformed it into early rock and roll in 1958. From there, the story widens. La Bamba did not just become famous. It entered the bloodstream of pop and rock, echoing through Twist and Shout, Louie Louie, Sweets for My Sweet, and Sugar and Spice.The episode asks how one Veracruz dance song helped teach rock and roll how to move.
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