Chest Pop
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A sharp, percussive forward thrust of the chest used to accent beats, breaks, and musical hits in bachata.
Intermediate focus
Now musicalize it. Put on a bachata track and listen for the accents — the bongo solo, the guitar stabs, the emphasis beats. Pop your chest on those accents while dancing the basic step. Work on different pop dynamics: a small subtle pop for a light accent, a bigger dramatic pop for a strong hit. Practice popping in different directions — forward, up, and even side pops for variety.
Tips
- •Practice the pop with your hands on your sternum — you should feel a sharp forward movement and immediate return
- •Film yourself and compare: can you see the pop clearly on video? If not, it needs more amplitude or speed
- •Alternate between smooth chest circles and sharp chest pops to build both control systems
Common mistakes
- •Using the shoulders instead of the chest — the pop should come from the sternum pushing forward, not the shoulders pulling back
- •Popping too slowly — the whole point is sharp, percussive speed. If it takes more than a split second, it's a push, not a pop
- •Popping randomly instead of on musical accents — a pop without musical context looks like a twitch
- •Tensing the entire upper body — only the chest muscles should fire; everything else stays relaxed
Practice drill
Play any bachata song. For the first verse, pop your chest ONLY on beat 1 of each 4-count. For the chorus, pop on beats 1 and 3. For the bridge/solo section, pop on every bongo hit you hear. This progressive drill builds both your pop technique and your musical listening. One full song.