The 1989 Lambada Craze
How a Pará partner dance and a French-Brazilian pop single produced a brief global vogue
Cultural context4 min read27 citations
The lambada craze of 1989 stands among the most abrupt transcontinental dance phenomena of the late twentieth century, converting a regional Brazilian partner dance into a fixture of European nightlife across a single summer.[1] The dance had originated in the northern state of Pará, where it circulated for years and absorbed elements of older forms long before any foreign audience took notice.[2] What carried the tradition abroad was less the choreography itself than a recording by the French-Brazilian group Kaoma, whose debut single supplied the movement with a portable and instantly recognizable soundtrack.[3] The pairing of an unfamiliar dance with a buoyant melody, amplified by aggressive European promotion, produced a vogue whose intensity proved inseparable from its brevity.[4]
As a movement form, the lambada was fundamentally a couples dance built on close partnering and a marked rotation of the hips.[5] Dancers held their legs slightly arched and moved from side to side, turning and swaying rather than stepping forward and back, a restriction that distinguished the original style from its later, looser imitations.[6] Its vocabulary was syncretic, drawing on the maxixe, carimbó, and forró of Brazil alongside the salsa and merengue of the Spanish Caribbean, so that the dance served as a meeting point of several regional idioms.[7] The fashions of the period grew inseparable from the dance, since the short skirts then in style flared outward when a woman turned, while her partner generally danced in long trousers.[8]
The musical lineage behind the craze was considerably older and more tangled than the 1989 hit suggested, crossing several national borders before it ever reached France.[9] The melody descended from a 1981 composition by the Bolivian group Los Kjarkas, which the Peruvian ensemble Cuarteto Continental reworked in 1984 into the first up-tempo arrangement, introducing the accordion that would define later versions, on the label INFOPESA under the producer Alberto Maraví.[10] The Brazilian singer Márcia Ferreira then recorded a Portuguese adaptation titled "Chorando Se Foi" in 1986, and it was her version that Kaoma covered three years afterward.[11] The genealogy thus ran from the Andean highlands through Peruvian cumbia into Brazilian pop, a trajectory that the eventual French marketing largely obscured.[12]
Kaoma's recording, sung in Portuguese with lead vocals by the Brazilian singer Loalwa Braz, became the commercial engine of the entire phenomenon.[13] The accompanying video, shot during June 1989 at Cocos beach near Trancoso in the state of Bahia, featured the child duo Chico and Roberta and circulated widely as a visual emblem of the trend.[14] At the time of release the single ranked, by contemporary accounts, as the best-selling European record CBS had ever issued, with about 1.8 million sales in France and over four million more across the rest of Europe.[15] The New York Times reckoned that it moved five million copies worldwide during 1989 alone, a figure that helps explain why 1989 and 1990 are remembered as the genre's boom years even though the rhythm itself was far older.[16]
The success of the recording carried a legal shadow that surfaced once its origins became widely known.[17] Because Kaoma neglected to credit the earlier songwriters and altered the lyrics that Márcia Ferreira had previously sung, the original authors pursued the matter through the courts, and the resulting plagiarism suits were resolved in their favor.[18] The episode stands as an early and instructive case of how a folk-derived melody, passed through several uncredited hands, could generate both enormous revenue and bitterly contested ownership once it entered the international market.[19]
Contemporary observers and later historians have generally placed the lambada within the wider tradition of novelty or fad dances, alongside such phenomena as the Twist, whose popularity tends to arrive in a sudden burst and recede almost as swiftly.[20] The dance's international reach was nonetheless notable for its breadth, extending beyond Europe to the Philippines, across much of Latin America, and through the Caribbean during the late 1980s.[21] Scholars of social dance often observe that such crazes, however ephemeral at their peak, occasionally leave durable traces, and a handful of fads have outlasted their initial moment to become lasting standards.[22] Whether the lambada belongs among the short-lived crazes or among the rarer fads that endure remains, in this light, a matter of interpretation.[23]
The craze unfolded against a distinctive moment in Brazilian cultural history, the years following the end of the military dictatorship in 1985, when the country's musical landscape grew unusually receptive to outside currents.[24] The same period had already produced the large Rock in Rio festival and, by 1989, the nation's first blues festival at Ribeirão Preto, evidence of a broader appetite for genre experimentation and imported styles among Brazilian audiences.[25] The lambada's sudden ascent in 1989 can therefore be read not as an isolated novelty but as one expression of a wider opening in Brazilian popular culture toward globalization and foreign exchange.[26] By the close of 1990 the commercial frenzy had largely subsided, leaving the lambada as a defining, if fleeting, emblem of late-1980s global pop.[27]
References
- 1.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 2.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 3.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 4.Dance crazes — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 5.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 6.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 7.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 8.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 9.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 10.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 11.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 12.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 13.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 14.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 15.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 16.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 17.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 18.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 19.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 20.Dance crazes — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 21.Lambada - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
- 22.Dance crazes — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 23.Dance crazes — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 24.When Brazil Got the Blues: The Diffusion of Blues in Brazil — Alan P. Marcus, Brasiliana- Journal for Brazilian Studies, 2022
- 25.When Brazil Got the Blues: The Diffusion of Blues in Brazil — Alan P. Marcus, Brasiliana- Journal for Brazilian Studies, 2022
- 26.When Brazil Got the Blues: The Diffusion of Blues in Brazil — Alan P. Marcus, Brasiliana- Journal for Brazilian Studies, 2022
- 27.Lambada (song) - Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org
How to cite this article
Choose a style and copy the citation.
Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). The 1989 Lambada Craze. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 18, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/lambada/cultural-context/the-1989-lambada-craze
Bailar Editorial Team. “The 1989 Lambada Craze.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/lambada/cultural-context/the-1989-lambada-craze. Accessed 18 June 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “The 1989 Lambada Craze.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 18, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/lambada/cultural-context/the-1989-lambada-craze.
@misc{bailar-lambada-the-1989-lambada-craze, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{The 1989 Lambada Craze}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/lambada/cultural-context/the-1989-lambada-craze}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-18} }
Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin
How we research & review these articles