Citations:salsatheque


 * 1988, Pablo Cuvi, In the Eyes of My People: Stories and Photos of Journeys through Ecuador, Dinediciones (1988), ISBN 9789978956076, page 172:
 * Accustomed to more arduous tasks, the Montubios dance without the wild display seen in the salsatheques, with their heads held high, some without shoes.
 * 1995, Fred Shuster, "Latin Music Mambos Its Way Up The Charts", Daily News (Los Angeles), 5 July 1995:
 * That's the sort of music mix that fuels the dance floor at salsatheques such as North Hollywood's crowded Salsa Club 2000, where disc jockeys spin old and new Latin grooves, but mostly avoid the slow stuff.
 * 1998, Franz Reynold, "Shut up and Dance", Latin Beat Magazine, 1 April 1998:
 * From ballroom to salsatheque, the colorido of bright fabric and quivering hips swirl above and around, the camera zooming by, invading the action, dragging you deep into the excitement.
 * 2006, Keith Watson, "Andrew strikes it lucky", London Evening Standard, 26 February 2008:
 * 'Spanish was one of my languages at university, so I spent time in Ecuador. And they don't have discotheques, they have salsatheques, so I learned salsa from a little lady who was about the size of Ronnie Corbett - if Dirty Dancing comes calling, I'll be there.'
 * 2010, V!VA Travel Guides: Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands, Viva Publishing Network (2010), ISBN 9780979126420, page 130:
 * After 30 years, Sese has earned the title as the oldest salsatheque in Quito, and continues to attract the best dancers in town, who come to this underground club to see and be seen.