In the mid-20th century the style was taken up by the
conjuntos and big bands as a type of up-tempo music. Many of the early
trovadores, such as
Manuel Corona (who worked in a brothel area of Havana), composed and sung guarachas as a balance for the slower
boleros and
canciónes.
Ñico Saquito was primarily a singer and composer of guarachas. The satirical lyric content also fitted well with the son, and many bands played both genres. Today it seems scarcely to exist as a distinct musical form, except in the hands of trova musicians; in larger groups it has been absorbed into the vast maw of
salsa. Singers who could handle the fast lyrics and were good improvisors were called
guaracheros or
guaracheras.
Celia Cruz was an example, though she, like
Miguelito Valdés and
Benny Moré, sung almost every type of Cuban lyric well. A better example is
Cascarita (Orlando Guerra), who was distinctly less comfortable with
boleros, but brilliant with fast numbers. In modern Cuban music so many threads are interwoven that one cannot easily distinguish these older roots. Perhaps in the lyrics of
Los Van Van the topicality and sauciness of the old guarachas found new life, though the rhythm would have surprised the old-timers. Among other composers who have written guarachas is
Morton Gouldthe piece is found in the third movement of his
Latin American Symphonette (Symphonette No. 4) (1940). Later in the 1980s Pedro Luis Ferrer and Virulo (Alejandro García Villalón) sought to renovate the guaracha, devising modern takes on the old themes. ==Guaracha in Puerto Rico==