One more mambo king, only for you spinning the hottest salsa tunes during your favorite summer salsa festival!
Ten years after Christmas' eve 1991 when he first mixed for a salsa crowd in Nijmegen, (Holland), Cisko moved to Belgium, while his name were heard in Amsterdam, Utrecht, Arnhem, Eindhoven, Düsseldorf, etc. He carried on with his activities in Holland organising parties or being invited as a dj but he wanted to be a part of the Belgian Salsa Scene where fellow dj's were heating up the local dance floors. Cisko clearly had a different way of playing salsa and the crowd liked it. He is often invited to plug his headphones on World's Salsa events, from Brussels to Dubai, Sofia, Bucharest, Paramaribo, Athens, and Amsterdam to name a few locations. About his passion, he said: "..I am not sure I have a "style" as SALSA evolves as music as well as a dance. I learn a lot listening to local and international dj's around the world. I try to adjust with the audience and smoothly bring him to react to my inspiration of the moment. My audience inspires me: a smile, a glance, a shine, a hip movement or a Salsero (a)'s footwork and I there I go for a next song or a mix. One guideline though, it has to be a good song, with a rich text or a great musical arrangement. I play salsa from New York, Miami, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Africa (oh yes) or Colombia, and from Europe or even Japan, I play salsa that makes one willing to move (including myself behind the deejay boot)! I play salsa without time or space barriers. I play salsa as if I were in an endless journey through Time and Space. I play salsa for Nowadays Word Citizens… …. because I strongly believe that The Salsa World should inspire the World today! Imagine that! I must confess, I never plan or think of my sets hours before and I most of the time decide what the next song will be during the last 30 seconds of the current track. The idea is: if one goes out for a party, he deserves to have fun. Hence once I push on the "play" button, nothing else is more important than focusing on the dancers' and listeners'