🇷🇺 MoscowLearnTe Robaré (Nicky Jam)

Te Robaré (Nicky Jam)

in Moscow 🇷🇺

Intermediate

A Nicky Jam x Ozuna bachata-urban crossover hit that trains dancers to navigate hybrid rhythms on modern dance floors.

Why it matters

Like it or not, urban-influenced bachata tracks dominate modern playlists. 'Te Robaré' is a perfect case study in how to stay musical when the track isn't pure bachata. Dancers who can handle these crossover songs with grace and musicality are the ones who enjoy every social, regardless of the DJ's preferences.

"Te Robaré" by Nicky Jam and Ozuna is a pop-urban track that has been widely adopted by the bachata community through remixes that add traditional bachata percussion and guitar over the original's reggaeton-influenced production. The song's catchy melody and accessible rhythm make it a DJ favorite, while its hybrid nature challenges dancers to reconcile the urban feel with bachata movement. The vocal delivery alternates between singing and rhythmic flow, creating different textures for dancers to respond to.

Beginner

The bachata remix adds a clear rhythm you can follow with your basic step. Don't overthink the urban elements — just find the 1-2-3-tap pattern in the percussion and dance to that. The melody is catchy enough that you'll naturally want to move, which is all you need.

Intermediate

Notice how the song alternates between sung sections (more melodic, easier to dance bachata to) and more rhythmic, flow-style vocal delivery (more urban feel). Let your movement reflect this: smoother, more flowing bachata movement during the singing, and slightly harder, more grounded movement during the rhythmic sections. The chorus is where both elements merge — bring your full bachata game to the chorus sections.

Advanced

Dissect the production layers: the original urban beat, the added bachata percussion, the vocal melody, and the bass line. Each suggests a different movement quality. Create a real-time DJ mix with your body — fade between urban and bachata movement as the musical emphasis shifts. During builds and drops (borrowed from urban production), use the energy dynamics that the production is engineered to create. The pre-chorus build-ups are designed to create tension that releases on the chorus — use that tension-release cycle in your leading.

Practice drill

Play the bachata remix and alternate every 16 counts between pure bachata movement and urban-influenced movement. Focus on making the transitions smooth rather than abrupt. The goal is to develop a blended style that honors both the original track and the bachata remix.

Te Robaré (Nicky Jam) in Moscow

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Sources: Nicky Jam x Ozuna — Te Robaré (bachata remix) · Bachata remix culture and copyright