Lento (Daniel Santacruz)
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
Slow-tempo bachata that emphasizes connection, body movement, and the emotional depth between partners.
Beginner focus
Slow doesn't mean easy. The challenge of lento bachata is filling the music without rushing. Keep your basic step but make each step take the full time the music gives you. Resist the urge to add extra steps to fill the space — instead, focus on smooth, continuous weight transfers and maintaining connection with your partner.
Tips
- •Practice your basic step at 100 BPM — if it feels awkward, you need more slow-tempo training
- •Watch yourself in a mirror at slow tempo to check for smooth, continuous movement vs. jerky transitions
- •Use lento songs to practice one specific body isolation per song — isolate your practice, not just your body parts
Common mistakes
- •Speeding up because the slow tempo feels uncomfortable or boring
- •Adding unnecessary movements to fill time instead of letting movement breathe
- •Losing frame and posture because the slow tempo makes you too relaxed
- •Neglecting musicality because you're focused entirely on body movement
Practice drill
Find the slowest bachata song you can (under 110 BPM). Dance your basic step and add exactly one body wave per 8-count, starting at the chest. The wave should take the full 8 counts to complete. If it finishes early, you're rushing. If it's not done by count 8, slow it down. This calibrates your body to the music's actual tempo.