Bachata Urbana
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
Modern bachata fused with hip-hop, trap, and electronic beats — heavier bass, vocal effects, and a street-influenced production style.
Intermediate focus
In urbana tracks, listen for the 'drop' — a moment where the beat cuts out and comes back harder, borrowed from electronic music. Use these drops for dramatic dance moments: a dip, a freeze, or a sharp direction change. Practice identifying drops by listening to 5 urbana tracks in a row.
Tips
- •Compare Prince Royce's earlier work to his latest releases to hear how urbana has evolved over the past decade
- •Practice isolating the bachata percussion underneath electronic production — close your eyes and hunt for the güira
- •Urbana's higher energy makes it great for practicing footwork patterns and quick direction changes
Common mistakes
- •Treating urbana as 'not real bachata' and refusing to develop ear for it — it's part of the genre's evolution
- •Overdancing urbana with non-stop tricks and footwork — even high-energy tracks need contrast and breathing room
- •Missing the bachata rhythm underneath the electronic production — the core 1-2-3-tap is still there
Practice drill
Play an urbana track and dance it twice. First time: ignore all electronic elements and dance only to the bachata percussion. Second time: add responses to the electronic drops and bass hits. Notice how much richer your dance becomes when you layer both.