Hip Isolation
in San Juan 🇵🇷
Moving your hips independently from the rest of your body — the engine of bachata's signature look.
Why it matters
Without hip movement, bachata looks like walking with a partner. The hip action on counts 4 and 8 is the heartbeat of the dance.
Hip isolation is the ability to move your hips in any direction while the rest of your body stays relatively still. It's what gives bachata its distinctive flavor and separates it from every other partner dance.
Beginner
Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, knees slightly bent. Try to move ONLY your hips to the right without your shoulders moving. Start with side-to-side, then front-to-back, then circles.
Intermediate
Integrate hip isolation into your basic step. On the tap, add a deliberate hip pop or circle. Practice figure-8 hip patterns while maintaining frame.
Advanced
Your hips move on autopilot — every step has hip articulation you don't think about. Your hips respond to the music's bass line like a subwoofer responds to low frequencies.
Practice drill
Place your hands on your hip bones. Draw the biggest circle you can with your hips while keeping your shoulders completely still. 10 circles each direction, daily for 2 weeks.
Hip Isolation in San Juan
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