Extension
in Melbourne 🇦🇺
The deliberate lengthening and opening of the body — reaching through limbs, spine, and lines to create visual expansion and musical expression.
Why it matters
Extension is what gives your dancing 'size.' Without it, even complex movements look small and cramped. A body wave with full extension covers more visual space and reads from across the room. An arm movement with extension looks intentional and beautiful; without it, the same arm movement looks like a forgotten limb. Extension paired with contraction gives you the full dynamic range — the inhale and exhale of dance.
Extension is the opposite of contraction. It's the opening, lengthening, reaching quality of movement — your chest lifts, your spine grows tall, your arms reach, your lines become long and visible. In bachata, extension is used for musical moments that call for expansion: chorus arrivals, crescendos, emotional peaks. It creates visual space around the dancer and communicates confidence, openness, and power.
Beginner
Stand tall. Now stand taller — press the crown of your head toward the ceiling, lengthen your spine, roll your shoulders back and down. Feel that openness in your chest? That's extension. Now try it in the basic step: stand tall, own your space, let your free arm have weight and purpose (not hanging dead). Extension starts with posture — good posture IS extension.
Intermediate
Add deliberate extension to your movement vocabulary. At the end of a body wave, extend fully — chest lifts, spine lengthens, maybe an arm reaches. After a contraction, the release into extension should feel like a spring expanding. Practice arm extensions — reach through your fingertips as if touching a wall just beyond your reach. In partner work, use extension during open position moments — both partners extending away from each other creates a beautiful visual tension.
Advanced
Extension becomes a continuous tool for musical expression. Partial extension for moderate musical moments. Full extension for peaks. Combine extension with off-axis work — extending while tilting creates long, dramatic lines. In partner work, synchronized extension (both partners expanding simultaneously) for climactic moments. Counter-extension (one extends while the other contracts) for tension and resolution. Extension in unexpected directions — laterally, diagonally, behind you — for visual surprise.
Practice drill
Start in contraction (rounded, closed). Over 4 counts, gradually extend: spine lengthens (count 1), chest opens (count 2), arms reach (count 3), full extension with fingertips energized (count 4). Hold for 4 counts. Over 4 counts, return to contraction. Repeat 8 times. Then do it in 2-count cycles: fast contraction-extension for musical accent practice. Four minutes.
Extension in Melbourne
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