Advanced

Wave Combo

Advanced Level

Full mastery — nuance, personal expression, and artistry

A sequence of connected body waves in different directions, speeds, or planes — chaining waves into a continuous, flowing movement phrase.

Tips

  • Practice with eyes closed to develop the kinesthetic flow between wave types — visual feedback can actually slow down the fluidity
  • Start building combos with just 2 waves, then add a third when the 2-wave combo is effortless. Gradual layering prevents sloppy transitions
  • Watch advanced dancers and try to identify where one wave type ends and another begins — in the best dancers, you can't. That's the goal

Common mistakes

  • Visible resets between waves — the transition should be invisible. If you see a 'stop-start,' practice that specific transition
  • Always using the same combo sequence — mix it up. Predictability kills visual interest
  • Sacrificing wave quality for combo complexity — a clean 2-wave combo beats a sloppy 5-wave combo
  • Forgetting musicality — wave combos should serve the music, not be a display of technique

Practice drill

Start with continuous undulation (forward body waves) for 8 counts. On count 1 of the next 8, transition to lateral waves for 8 counts. Then reverse waves for 8 counts. Then back to forward. The transition on count 1 should be smooth — no stopping or resetting. Once this 32-count pattern is clean, randomize: forward 4, lateral 4, reverse 4, lateral 4. Then reduce to 2-count changes. The faster you can cleanly change wave direction, the more expressive your combos become. Five minutes.

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