A lot of singers find a musical genre people like and stick with it. That's being a conformist. I sing ballads, rock, salsa, rap.
I grew up dancing salsa - you know, a traditional Puerto Rican dance.
I used to be so embarrassed by salsa; I wasn't into it.
Music's always been in my home. My dad plays guitar, and I grew up listening to cumbia and salsa and boleros.
I'd have to say Sunset Salsa. Nothing against Honey Lime, but it's for losers.
I love salsa. I use to take salsa classes when I was a little girl with my mom.
In my childhood, I was very fond of western music and dance forms like Hip Hop, Salsa, Tango, etc.
I'm a big salsa fan!
Salsa is a phenomenal way to stay fit, have a great time with your friends and listen to great music.
Salsa, classic rock, soul music, jazz... all of that was a part of my education in making hip-hop music.
My interested in Brazilian music stemmed from wanting to find a musical identity other than the salsa and meringue that I was inundated with in Venezuela as a child.
A farmer friend of mine told me recently about a busload of middle school children who came to his farm for a tour. The first two boys off the bus asked, "Where is the salsa tree?" They thought they could go pick salsa, like apples and peaches. Oh my. What do they put on SAT tests to measure this? Does anybody care? How little can a person know about food and still make educated decisions about it? Is this knowledge going to change before they enter the voting booth? Now that's a scary thought.
I am learning how to dance hip-hop. I'm a good dancer when I dance salsa.
We Houstonians are a spicy lot. We raise our babies with tongues of fire, mostly lit by chips and salsa. Our blood is as thick and warm as queso.
When Aventura began, there was a lot of salsa and merengue, and we said, 'Let's just do what we do.' Then Aventura blew up, but urban was in its prime.
I could just have chips and salsa for dinner every day.
My kids like their eggs with catsup. I like mine with salsa.
No one had ever called me unnatural before, except for the time I put ketchup on a taco. But seriously, we'd been out of salsa, so what else was I supposed to do?
We are now the proud owners of a white boy. Now we have to shop in the caucasian isle and get sunscreen, mayonaise and mild salsa because the other ones really hawt!
I love chips and salsa. Guacamole.
I grew up around salsa, merengue, bachata, bass music, freestyle, hip-hop, techno, house, rave.
I love dancing and practiced ballet for ten years until I realized I wouldn't make it professionally - then I started taking salsa classes. I learned to dance samba in Rio and Salvador when I lived in Brazil.
Start dancing immediately. Run to the closest dance studio, and study the style of dance of the music you love. If you love hip-hop music, go to a hip-hop class. If you love salsa, take a salsa class. It will become infectious and you'll keep going back.
I just feel so sexy when I'm salsa dancing and wearing the salsa clothes. I love dancing.
I was always interested in trying to find how different genres would affect the lyrics that I'd written. Salsa is where most of my songs have been recorded, the genre of salsa. It's very frenetic, fast-paced. And I felt that the lyrics sometimes were being lost.
When I'm a little kid watching Chicago Bears games, hot salsa would be on the table and the first time I was like, 'Ah, this is hot Dad, get mild salsa,' and he was like: 'Not in my house. We have real salsa. And if you can't handle real salsa then you can just eat dry chips.'
Whenever I cook, I think of Spanish music, so I always have to listen to some sort of salsa. It gets your body going.
Salsa verde is delicious with trout or most any fish.
My inner goddess is doing the merengue with some salsa moves.
Any Latin dance, whether it be salsa, cha cha, samba, etc., is very sexy for me to see a woman do. Using your hips is the key.
The main part of living in Miami is that you have to learn how to dance salsa.
I spent my last year of high school in Latin America, and there's a edge of salsa under all of my rhythms.
I met my first midget in Mexico, and he was a waiter with a sombrero on his head, filled with chips and salsa. Like I was gonna let that guy get away - I don't think so.
It didn't even occur to me that I'm the last person in the world who should play salsa or Brazilian music.
It's all about salsa with grain chips, tofu, turkey slices, hummus, and coconut water.
I'm going to try to do as many styles as I can. A salsa number, rock and roll, country.... I've talked to a million people about it. Obviously, I'd love Prince to do it. I'm sure he'll produce the whole album for me.
I come from a pop background, but I'm also a Puerto Rican and I do feel this music. My approach to salsa is a humble one, and I defy anybody to prove that I'm faking it.
I must confess, I'm not the best cook. I make a mean salsa, as I like hot sauce and, you know, tacos, because I'm a California kid, and that's about it.
My Mexican specialty is chilaquiles. I make tortillas from scratch, then add garlic, onions, eggs, chopped-up carrots and peppers, Jack cheese, and salsa.
I love dancing; I adore salsa dancing and wish I could be in a Broadway chorus.
By the time you're in your 30s, unless somebody makes the god-awful decision to gift you with a cooking class or salsa lessons, it may have been a while since you learnt something new.
I'm always thirsty when I wake up, so I guzzle a bottle of Smart water before I scramble tofu with onions, peppers and spinach and top it with salsa. I've been a vegetarian for years, but I recently became vegan.
I've never read any of the '50 Shades of Grey' books because the Internet pre-educated me about the 'my inner goddess is doing the merengue with some salsa moves' material.
I'm a huge salsa fan. I actually have a salsa on my album, 'Formula Vol. 2,' featuring Marc Anthony.
I just feel so sexy when I'm salsa dancing and wearing the salsa clothes. I love dancing, and the salsa is just so sexy.
I was a salsa dancer for the majority of my life, from, like, 7 to 17, and did the World Salsa Congresses. I realized that I wanted to continue obviously to be a performer. But in my household, being an actor and jumping into acting is not really accepted.
Growing up in Caracas, Venezuela, the ubiquitous music is salsa, cumbia, merengue, a little bit of samba.
The genre I listen to the most is salsa, so people look at me and see this guy who's done mostly romantic ballads, but there's always been this other side.
I grew up next to the ocean, on the coast, and would dance the salsa all day, so I just learned those rhythms and knew how to move my body when I was very little.
The salsa is all about hips, being confident and sexiness.
The classic Italian green sauce, salsa verde, is easy to make and especially nice in the spring when bunches of fresh herbs start appearing in the farmers market or in your garden.
Women in salsa - women everywhere - we always gotta be defending ourselves.
A lot of tight Senate races out there. Let's hit those chips with another dash of salsa, Ed Bradley.
I spent my last year of high school in Latin America, and there's a edge of salsa under all of my rhythms
The rise of salsa was such an important time in musical history, not just in Latin music but music in general, because these guys created a new sound.
De La Hoya doesn't know about salsa. He should keep on singing mariachis and leave the salsa to me. I'm good at salsa.
I'm Mexican. I eat salsa with everything.
I'll eat anything. I love food in general. I love traditional Mexican, carne asada. Just meat, beans, rice, and some good salsa.
I go out and salsa with friends, especially in the summertime. Now that's incredible cardio!
I'm planning to retire from salsa. I'm planning to do a farewell tour.
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