Intermediate

Body Contact

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

Torso-to-torso connection between partners that enables direct transmission of body movement, waves, and musical interpretation.

Intermediate focus

Now use body contact intentionally. For a body wave, the leader initiates through the torso contact — the follower feels the wave arrive and lets it pass through their body. Practice standing face-to-face, torso touching, and passing a wave from leader to follower. The contact should be consistent but not crushing. Learn to modulate — more contact for wave work, less for turns and open movements.

Tips

  • Think of body contact like a handshake — it should match your partner's pressure, not overwhelm it
  • Practice body waves with a wall first — feel how your torso rolls against a flat surface, then translate that to a partner
  • Communicate verbally with new partners about comfort levels — not everyone is ready for close contact immediately

Common mistakes

  • Pressing too hard — contact should be firm enough to communicate but not so much that it restricts movement
  • Only connecting at one point instead of having available surface area for different signals
  • Losing contact during the movements that need it most — like pulling away during a body wave
  • Confusing body contact with weight sharing — you should each maintain your own balance

Practice drill

Face your partner in close hold, torso in full contact. Leader: do a slow body wave from chest to hips. Follower: try to receive and mirror the wave through the contact alone, no visual cues (close your eyes). Switch roles. If the wave transfers cleanly, your body contact communication is working. Repeat 10 times each.

Related terms