Hip Styling
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
Hip styling is the ornamental art of hip accents — turning the natural hip motion of bachata into personal expression and rhythmic punctuation.
Intermediate focus
Add hip circles: during a 4-count hold or pause, circle your hips in a smooth, continuous motion. Forward, right, back, left, and repeat. Keep the upper body still. Then learn the figure-eight: the hips trace an infinity symbol, alternating between the right and left hip. This is harder than circles and requires more pelvic mobility. Use hip circles and figure-eights during musical moments that call for flowing movement.
Tips
- •Practice hip styling in front of a mirror from the side view. The side profile reveals hip range of motion that the front view hides.
- •Isolate: stand on one foot and circle the hip of the standing leg without moving anything else. This builds the isolation needed for styled hip movement during dancing.
- •Watch Dominican dancers for sharp hip accents, sensual dancers for flowing hip circles, and African dancers for polyrhythmic hip movement. Each tradition offers different hip intelligence.
Common mistakes
- •Forcing hip movement from the waist instead of letting it originate from weight transfer and pelvic tilt
- •Making hip styling too large and losing balance or disrupting the partner
- •Hip styling that looks the same at every tempo — fast music needs smaller, sharper styling; slow music needs larger, flowing styling
Practice drill
Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, hands on waist. Do 20 hip circles right, 20 left, 20 figure-eights. Then put on music and do hip pops on every 4th and 8th count for a full song while doing the basic step. Finally, combine: circles during slow phrases, pops during accents, figure-eights during transitions. This builds a hip styling vocabulary you can draw from in social dancing.