Guitar
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
The lead voice of bachata — the requinto guitar plays the melodies and emotional hooks that define what the music makes you feel.
Intermediate focus
Start distinguishing the guitar's different techniques: arpeggios (broken chords, flowing), staccato (short, choppy notes), and slides (smooth transitions between notes). Each technique creates a different emotional quality. Practice matching your body movement quality to the guitar's technique — fluid body movement for arpeggios, sharp isolations for staccato.
Tips
- •Look up 'bachata guitar lesson' videos on YouTube — even 10 minutes of seeing how the instrument is played changes how you hear it
- •The guitar solo (usually 30-60 seconds mid-song) is your moment to shine musically — plan your best interpretation for this section
- •Follow bachata guitarists like Martires De León or Junior Solano on social media to appreciate the instrument's complexity
Common mistakes
- •Only hearing the guitar during solos and ignoring its constant presence throughout the song
- •Not distinguishing between requinto (melody) and segunda (rhythm) guitars — they have very different roles
- •Dancing to the beat only and ignoring the guitar completely — this makes your dance technically correct but emotionally flat
Practice drill
Play five different bachata songs and identify the guitar solo section in each. During each solo, stop dancing and just move your hands as if you were playing the guitar. This 'air guitar' exercise deepens your connection to the melody. Then dance the solos with your whole body interpreting the guitar lines.