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Rueda de Casino

Collective round-dance variant of Cuban casino salsa

Variants4 min read12 citations

Limited sources — this is a concise, best-effort entry that may be expanded as more material becomes available.

Rueda de Casino is the collective, circular form of salsa: a salsa round dance derived from the Cuban couple dance known as casino, in which the bilateral lead-and-follow of a single pair is opened out into a circular, group organization of several couples.[1] It belongs to the salsa family — among the most widely practiced Latin partner dances in the world, realized in several distinct regional styles[2] — and retains salsa's footwork and partnering vocabulary while recasting them as a shared, collective event. How a round is performed depends on the occasion: in some social and instructional settings it is set in advance as a choreography, while in others it unfolds through improvisation,[1] and it stands among several further salsa variants practiced across different regional and social contexts.[2]

Musical roots and the salsa family

The casino tradition from which Rueda de Casino descends belongs to a wider field of Afro-Cuban musical expression. Salsa's genealogy has long been debated by scholars, yet broad agreement has settled on the Afro-Cuban derivation of its rhythmic foundation as the basis from which the genre grew.[3] Those Afro-Caribbean rhythmic structures were fused with jazz and other musical idioms to produce the salsa that would become widely known.[3] The music, and the social dancing bound to it, traveled well beyond the island: salsa diffused across Latin America and into North American cities — New York chief among them — carried in large part by the northward migration of Afro-Caribbean and Latin American communities.[4]

Twentieth-century Cuban popular music was distinguished by the breadth and permeability of its dance genres, and the bands that played them moved fluidly among styles. La Sonora Matancera, founded in the Matanzas region in the 1920s, ranged across rumba, guaguancó, chachachá, son cubano, mambo, danzón, and salsa, among other forms,[5] a versatility that reflects the densely layered tradition of Cuban dance music within which casino and, in turn, Rueda de Casino took shape as recognizable practices.

Physical demands

Exercise scientists have examined Rueda de Casino as a physiologically distinct condition within the salsa family rather than a merely stylistic one. A 2012 study set a typical salsa lesson, a Rueda de Casino lesson, and unstructured social dancing at a nightclub against one another, recording heart rate throughout after first measuring each dancer's height, weight, and maximal oxygen uptake. Exercise intensity proved moderate across all three conditions, spanning roughly 3.9 to 5.5 metabolic equivalents, while significant differences emerged between men and women in peak heart rate, mean percentage of heart rate reserve, and mean energy expenditure, alongside significant interactions between sex and dancing condition.[6]

A 2015 investigation turned from raw output to the relationship between physical demand and felt effort — a relationship of practical interest because the affective and exertional responses a person has during exercise are thought to help predict whether they keep it up. Ten couples completed structured typical-salsa and Rueda de Casino lessons together with unstructured nightclub dancing, their percentage of heart rate reserve recorded continuously and their perceived exertion and affective valence rated at regular intervals. Heart-rate reserve ranged from about 41 to 52 percent across the styles — placing dancers near their ventilatory threshold — and the Rueda de Casino lesson imposed a significantly heavier cardiovascular load than the typical salsa lesson, even though ratings of perceived exertion and affective valence did not differ significantly across the salsa conditions.[7] For Rueda de Casino, this means a dancer can take on a measurably greater cardiovascular workload than in bilateral partner salsa without necessarily registering it as harder.

Transnational circulation

Beyond the laboratory, Rueda de Casino moves within the wider transnational economy of salsa. Researchers have traced how practitioners, choreographic conventions, and professional expertise travel among Latin American cities, European urban centers, and Havana itself, and how the gendered and racialized dynamics of the dance floor intersect with this cross-border mobility.[8] Within those networks Rueda de Casino circulates as a distinctly Cuban-rooted, collective form, carrying its round organization into settings far from its origins while remaining clearly set apart from bilateral partner styles by the very circularity that defines it.

References

  1. 1.Rueda de CasinoWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  2. 2.Salsa (dance)Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  3. 3.Salsa (baile)Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  4. 4.Salsa (estilo cubano)Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  5. 5.La Sonora MatanceraWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  6. 6.Exercise Intensity and Gender Difference of 3 Different Salsa Dancing ConditionsGian Pietro Emerenziani, International Journal of Sports Medicine, 2012
  7. 7.Psychophysiological Responses to Salsa DanceLaura Guidetti, PLoS ONE, 2015
  8. 8.Entangled Mobilities in the Transnational Salsa CircuitJoanna Menet, 2020
  9. 9.Cuban salsaWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  10. 10.Historia del baile y la rueda de casino-salsaBorges, Alan, 1947- author, 2012
  11. 11.International Dance OrganizationWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  12. 12.RuedaWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia

How to cite this article

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APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Rueda de Casino. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 8, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/salsa/variants/rueda-de-casino

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Rueda de Casino.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/salsa/variants/rueda-de-casino. Accessed 8 July 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Rueda de Casino.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 8, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/salsa/variants/rueda-de-casino.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-salsa-rueda-de-casino, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Rueda de Casino}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/salsa/variants/rueda-de-casino}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-08} }

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