Freeze
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A sudden full-body stop mid-movement — the silence between notes that makes the music visible.
Intermediate focus
Shape your freezes. Instead of just stopping in whatever position you're in, anticipate the break and arrive in a visually interesting position — a dip silhouette, an extended line, a dramatic reach. Practice freezing at different points in a turn or body wave. The freeze should look like a photograph you'd want to frame. Also practice the exit: how you leave a freeze is as important as how you enter it.
Tips
- •Practice freezes alone first: dance to a song and hit every break with a full-body stop. Film yourself and check if you're landing exactly on the accent.
- •When you freeze, engage your core slightly and hold your breath for a beat — this creates visible tension that makes the freeze look intentional.
- •The best freezes happen when you stop moving but don't stop connecting. Eyes on your partner during a freeze can be electric.
Common mistakes
- •Freezing on the wrong beat — the stop must land exactly on the musical accent
- •One partner freezing while the other keeps moving, breaking the illusion
- •Holding the freeze too long and missing the re-entry to the music
- •Freezing with no body tension, looking like you just forgot the next move rather than making a deliberate stop
Practice drill
Pick a bachata song with clear breaks (Romeo Santos songs are full of them). Dance the entire song and freeze on every single break, holding each freeze for exactly the duration of the break. Count how many you hit cleanly. Goal: 80% accuracy. This trains your ears and your brakes simultaneously.