Head Movement (Zouk)
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
Fluid, led head movements borrowed from Brazilian zouk — the element that makes sensual bachata look like liquid poetry.
Beginner focus
Do NOT start with head movements in the dance. Start with neck strengthening: slow, controlled neck circles, chin tucks, and lateral flexions. Follower: your neck must be strong enough to control the deceleration of your own head. Leader: your first head movement leads should be tiny — just a slight tilt, never a full roll. Both partners: if there's any sharp pain, stop immediately. Head movement is a privilege you earn through preparation.
Tips
- •Follower: train your neck like you'd train any other dance muscle. Neck strengthening exercises 3x per week makes everything safer and more beautiful.
- •Leader: your hand between the follower's shoulder blades is the steering wheel. Light, clear, consistent pressure — never force.
- •Less is more with head movement. One perfectly timed, beautifully controlled head circle is worth more than five sloppy ones.
Common mistakes
- •Leader pushing or forcing the head instead of suggesting direction through upper back and frame
- •Follower going completely limp in the neck, letting the head drop with no muscular control
- •Attempting complex head movements before building neck strength and trust
- •Using head movements on every phrase, creating visual noise instead of musical punctuation
Practice drill
Follower solo drill: stand with eyes closed and slowly trace a circle with the crown of your head, taking 8 full counts for one circle. Maintain even speed throughout — no fast bits, no pauses. Reverse direction. Then try figure-eights. Do this daily for 2 weeks before attempting led head movements with a partner.