Bachata: The New York School

Maná and other Spanish rock bands have also had an influence on the music of the young generation of bachateros recording in New York City. The most important among these has been the group Aventura, whose music departs significantly from the earlier model of bachata. Aventura’s guitarist uses sound effects which, although rudimentary when compared to what even amateur rock guitarists employ, are far beyond what other bachateros have had recourse to—extensive use of a wah-wah pedal, for example. The group’s vocals are heavily influenced by R&B, an innovation which lead to the unprecedented success of the song “Obsesión”. The song was a duo between Aventura’s singer and a female vocalist, and began to exploit the potential of R&B, with its history of great female singers. Doubtless the ongoing success of Monchy y Alexandra’s male-female combination also had its impact on the song’s arrangers.

Although unquestionably innovative, Aventura’s music remains in many ways traditional bachata; except in certain sections of certain songs, the bass and the percussion mark a clearly defined, danceable bolero rhythm. What separates Aventura and the host of imitators they have inspired from the bachateros who came before them is more a question of image. After Blas Durán, the bachatero ceased to be a symbol of poverty and dissipation. As the 1990s progressed, bachateros became romantic singers who were equally appealing to the middle class and to the marginalized audience which the music had always called its own. The bachateros of the 1990s remained, however, quintessentially Dominican, and appealed to an almost strictly Dominican audience - until Monchy y Alexandra began penetrating into a broader market. Before Monchy y Alexandra, virtually the only Latinos who had heard of bachata besides Dominicans were those who lived alongside a substantial Dominican community - in places like New York, Puerto Rico or Providence, Rhode Island.

With the advent of Aventura, the image of the bachatero has taken another turn towards the mainstream. The group doesn’t play in the same small venues in which bachateros have traditionally played. One of the advantages of bachata, which has made it so durable over the years, is that a group of five musicians can play almost anywhere, whereas a merengue band, with twelve or fifteen musicians, has to charge twice what a bachatero would charge just to cover their nomina. Aventura, however, has followed the rock and roll model of playing in arenas and larger local venues like theaters and major clubs, and the price they command far exceeds what any bachatero has been able to ask before. The way the band dresses and presents itself also reflects the extreme capitalism of the hip-hop culture around which these musicians grew up.

Finally, Aventura is representative of a new generation of Dominican musicians with economic possibilities which bachateros like Marino Pérez and Victor Estevez never dreamed of. They have not been limited by language, immigration policy, or simple poverty in their access to the enormous North American market. While they don’t come from a privileged group in relation to North American society, the privileges they enjoy in comparison to earlier bachateros are immense. This different economic perspective is abundantly manifest in the extremely fashion-conscious image which the group portrays.

It is too early to judge what may come of Aventura’s dramatic rise. At the time of the meteoric success of “Obsesión”, it seemed as though Aventura’s stylistic innovations would mark the end of traditional bachata, just as Blas Durán’s use of the electric guitar had changed the genre forever. Two years later, however, traditional bachateros like Raulín Rodriguez and Joe Veras have experienced a strong resurgence of popularity, playing songs which demonstrate little of the influence of the young group from New York. While Aventura’s appeal to other markets is certainly stronger than that of traditional bachateros like Rodriguez and Veras, the group’s impact on the genre has not been as profound as many expected it to be. They opened the way for a handful of musicians with similar ideas in both New York and the Dominican Republic, as well as for a number of groups who are unabashed Aventura imitators. These groups have their own audience, essentially different from that of traditional bachateros, and they have drawn interest from sectors of the North American music industry, particularly from rap artists. It remains to be seen whether the New York School’s brand of bachata will be a trend, a separate style with a separate market, or whether it will produce lasting changes in bachata as a whole.

-- David C. Wayne

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Christian Camacho January 21, 2010

the pickup used is a gibson 57 classic installed into a acoustic electric guitar. best if not mounted in anyway directly to the sound hole as anything touching the top will directly affect the guitar's tonal characteristics. the best way i've seen to mount this is on small wooden stilts glued on the inside of the guitar to the back exactly where you want the pickup.

marisol January 12, 2010

me gustaria a prender a baila bachata pronto en el aria de new york por favor digame donde no profesional si no para bailar con mi pareja muchas gracias

anderson January 2, 2010

hi i love bachata and i would really like to know what pickup will work on an acustic-electric guitar its an Ibanez v70ce

Edgar Torres December 3, 2009

me gustaria aprender bailar bachata, me podrian decir donde hay una escuela en new york;yo vivo en brooklyn. grasias y espero su contestacion lo mas pronto posible. grasias.

gonzalo lozado November 16, 2009

quiero aprender a tocar bachatas pueden mandare alguna informacion mi correo es cashcaras2000@yahoo.es

gonzalo November 16, 2009

quiero aprender a tocar bachatas

Charley Zarat October 5, 2009

hola bachateros,me podrian decir en donde puedo llevar mi gitarra acustica para que le pongan el pickup. lla la lleve a guitarcenter i me dijieron que tal vez no sepudiera pero si lograran ponerlo de todos modos iba a causar mucho feedback.

gerard June 21, 2009

quiero aprender a ticar bachata

Pedro January 19, 2009

Para los efectos usa el chorus, puedes combinarlo a veces con algo de wah wah, no uses un wah automatico ni uno de baja calidad, para eso mejor no comprarlo. El sonido debe ser bastante limpio, no te pases con los efectos. Tambien un phaser o un efecto similar que no recuerdo el nombre, te vendria bien siempre que no abuses y lo uses suave. Las guitarras que te vendrian bien son la semisolida, acustica y flamenca. No se como quedaria una semisolida con cuerdas de flamenco para bachata pero me gustaria probarlo cuando tenga la ocasion. Aventura utiliza guitarras electricas y de flamenco pero creo que la mayoria utilizan la guitarra acustica, a veces electroacustica. Las guitarras para bachata deben tener un corte bajo el mastil para poder llegar al traste 15 o mas con facilidad. Yo soy un guitarrista sin guitarra :-( pero me encanta la bachata y estoy pensando de comprarme una guitarra para aprender a tocar bachatas. por cierto, en el dedo gordo se mete una pua de pulgar.

Franco January 18, 2009

They all use gibson vintage 59 humbuckers mounted in an acoustic guitar and run it through a boss chorus pedal.