Shines
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
Solo footwork sequences performed without a partner, showcasing individual style, musicality, and rhythmic creativity.
Beginner focus
Start with simple variations of your basic step: side step with a tap, side step with a heel tap, side step with a cross-behind. Chain three of these together and you have a basic shine. Don't worry about looking fancy — focus on staying on time and finishing your combination cleanly. A simple shine done perfectly beats a complex one done sloppily.
Tips
- •Record yourself doing shines and watch without sound. If the timing is visible even without music, your rhythmic accuracy is good.
- •Learn 3 reliable eight-count shines that you can pull out anytime. Consistency beats variety in social dancing.
- •Watch other dancers' shines during socials and steal what you like. Everyone does this — it's how shines evolve.
Common mistakes
- •Going too complex too fast — a shine that you can't finish on time is worse than a simple one that's perfectly timed.
- •Shining for too long — 8-16 counts is usually enough. Any longer and it becomes a solo performance, not a partner dance.
- •Forgetting the partner — even during shines, maintain visual connection and spatial awareness with your partner.
- •Ignoring the music — shines that don't match the musical energy look random and disconnected.
- •All footwork, no body — good shines include arm movement, body rolls, and styling, not just fancy feet.
Practice drill
Put on a bachata track. Dance the first verse with basic steps only. When the chorus or a musical break hits, open up and shine for 8 counts, then return to basics. Repeat through the entire song, treating every energy change as a shine opportunity. Film it. Watch which shines worked and which ones you stumbled through. Refine the winners, discard the rest.