Beginner
Cambré
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
A controlled back bend from standing that says 'I trust you enough to fall' — when done right, it stops time.
Beginner focus
Do NOT attempt cambres with a partner until you can do them solo. Stand with feet wider than hip-width, engage your core, and slowly lean back from your upper spine — not your lower back. Your lower back should stay neutral. Use a wall for support initially.
Tips
- •The follower should always be able to stop and come back up at any point. If you can't, you've gone too deep.
- •Leaders: your legs are your foundation. Wide stance, bent knees, core engaged. Your back stays vertical.
Common mistakes
- •Bending from the lower back instead of the thoracic spine — this causes pain and injury
- •Going deeper than the leader can support
- •No musical reason — a cambre without musical timing is just bending backward
- •Leader letting go or losing balance
Practice drill
Solo work: stand in front of a mirror in profile. Place your hands on your ribs. Lean back only from above your hands — your hips and lower back stay stacked. Hold for 5 seconds. Come back up with control. Repeat 10 times.
Other levels
Related terms
Training reads
Vaganova Technique for Bachata Dancers — Upper Back Cambré
The biomechanics of the cambré from Vaganova's classical ballet system, translated for bachata sensual dancers.
Towel Drills for Bachata — Upper-Body Training
Five drills that build the thoracic mobility and frame control a clean cambré depends on.