Hip Roll
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A slow, controlled, continuous rolling motion of the hips — a sensual, fluid movement that follows melodic phrases and emotional arcs in the music.
Intermediate focus
Add dynamics to the roll. Accelerate through one portion, decelerate through another — matching the musical phrase. Make the roll three-dimensional: as the hips go back, add a slight downward drop; as they come forward, a slight lift. This vertical component transforms a flat circle into a true 'roll.' In partner work, hip rolls in body contact create a smooth, shared movement that's incredibly connective.
Tips
- •Practice the hip roll with your favorite slow bachata song — let the melody literally move your hips
- •Close your eyes while practicing — without visual feedback, you develop deeper proprioceptive awareness of the movement
- •Think 'stirring a big pot of soup with your hips' — smooth, continuous, circular
Common mistakes
- •Going too fast — the hip roll is deliberately slow; speed robs it of its character
- •Making it jerky — any visible 'corners' in the roll mean you need to smooth the transitions
- •Only rolling in one direction — practice clockwise and counterclockwise equally
- •Tensing the upper body — the stillness above should be relaxed stability, not rigid holding
Practice drill
Play a slow bachata track (Romeo Santos, Prince Royce). Stand with feet shoulder-width, knees bent. Do one complete hip roll per 8-count for the entire verse. Focus on making each roll smoother than the last. Then one roll per 4-count for the chorus. The transition between these speeds without losing smoothness is the skill. One full song.