Lasso
A circular arm lead that traces an arc over the follower's head — like drawing a halo with your hand connection.
Why it matters
The lasso teaches arm path awareness — both partners must maintain clean circular geometry while managing hand grip rotation. Leaders learn to create smooth, predictable arm paths that the follower can track. Followers learn to read overhead signals and manage their own arm weight during elevated movements. It's also the entry mechanism for many advanced figures: sombrero, neck-wrap, and certain dip entries all begin with a lasso-type arm path.
The lasso is a figure where the leader guides the joined hands in a circular arc over the follower's head, creating a visually striking overhead loop that resembles a cowboy's lasso in motion. It's a transitional figure that can lead into wraps, turns, or position changes. The circle can be full (360 degrees over the head) or partial (an arc that redirects). What makes the lasso elegant is the continuous, fluid quality of the arm motion — it should look like drawing a perfect circle in the air, not like waving a flag.
Beginner
From open hold, leader: lift your left hand (holding her right) in a smooth arc to your right, passing over her head in a clockwise circle. Keep the circle wide and slow — if the follower has to duck, your circle is too small or too low. The elbow should stay soft, not locked straight. Complete the circle and return to open hold. Follower: let the hand guide you, keeping your arm relaxed with just enough tone to stay connected.
Intermediate
Use the lasso as a setup tool. A lasso that continues past the head can wrap into a sombrero. A lasso that reverses mid-arc becomes a copa-type redirect. Practice lassoing into different positions: into cuddle, into sweetheart, into a back-to-back. Also experiment with lassoing on different counts — a lasso that starts on count 1 versus count 5 creates different rhythmic feels.
Advanced
Chain lassos into complex arm choreography. Double lasso (two rotations), alternating-hand lasso, lasso with a body wave pass-through. At this level, the lasso is a phrase, not a figure — you start it, weave other movements through it, and resolve it when the music says so. The arm path becomes a continuous ribbon that wraps and unwraps the partnership like calligraphy.
Tips
- •Leader: imagine you're holding a pen and drawing a perfect circle on the ceiling. That's the quality of motion you want.
- •Keep the circle above the follower's crown by at least 6 inches. Give her room to exist inside the arc.
- •Follower: maintain gentle upward pressure during the overhead portion — this keeps the connection alive and prevents the hand from sliding apart.
Common mistakes
- •Making the circle too tight, forcing the follower to duck or scrunch her shoulders
- •Leading the lasso with stiff, locked arms instead of soft, flowing elbows
- •Losing hand grip during the overhead portion because of poor grip rotation
- •Spinning the hand too fast, creating a windmill effect rather than a controlled arc
Practice drill
Solo practice first: hold a water bottle in your hand and trace slow, perfect circles overhead. The water shouldn't slosh. Then with a partner: 10 lassos clockwise, 10 counterclockwise, focusing on maintaining a perfectly round path with consistent speed throughout.
The science▶
The lasso requires coordinated shoulder abduction, external rotation, and elbow flexion/extension in a continuous circular pattern. The glenohumeral joint operates near its maximal range during the overhead phase, making it important for both partners to keep the circle wide enough to avoid impingement. The rotator cuff muscles work throughout the movement to stabilize the humeral head in the glenoid fossa.
Cultural context
The lasso appears in salsa, cha-cha, and zouk with similar mechanics but different timing. In bachata, the lasso gained popularity as sensual style demanded more overhead arm work to create dramatic visual lines. The name itself varies — some instructors call it a 'halo,' others call it a 'crown' — but the mechanical concept is universal across all partner dances that use raised arm connections.
See also
An open-position figure where the follower sweeps outward like a fan unfolding — spacious, visual, and musically satisfying.
Neck WrapA figure where the leader's or follower's arm drapes across the partner's neck — intimate, dramatic, and requires absolute trust.
Open HoldA partner position connected only through the hands, creating space for turns, shines, and independent movement.
SombreroA figure where the arm passes over both partners' heads like putting on a wide-brimmed hat — the move that makes beginners gasp.