Hip Pop
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
A sharp, percussive thrust of the hip to one side or forward — the lower-body equivalent of a chest pop, used to accent rhythmic hits.
Beginner focus
Stand with feet shoulder-width, knees slightly bent. Quickly push your right hip out to the right and snap it back. The movement should be small (2-3 inches) and fast. Now the left side. The key is speed: out and back in less than a beat. Don't use your whole body — just the hip. Your upper body should barely register the movement. Practice 10 pops each side, getting sharper each time.
Tips
- •Think of your hip as a drumstick hitting a drum — quick, sharp, bouncing back immediately
- •Practice with your hands on your ribcage — if your ribcage moves during the pop, you need more isolation
- •Listen to bachata bongos specifically and pop every bongo hit for one full song — this trains both the technique and the musical ear
Common mistakes
- •Using the whole torso — the pop should be isolated to the hip; upper body stays quiet
- •Moving too slowly — if it takes a full beat, it's a push, not a pop
- •Always popping in the same direction — train both sides equally
- •Popping without musical context — random pops look like twitches, musical pops look intentional
Practice drill
Put on a bachata track. For 8 counts: basic step with hip pop on every count 4 (right side). Next 8 counts: pop on every count 8 (left side). Next 8 counts: pop on 4 AND 8 (alternating sides). Next 8 counts: pop on every bongo accent you hear, any side. This progressive drill builds from rhythmic to musical popping. One full song.