La Bicicleta (Shakira & Carlos Vives)
Carlos Vives and Shakira's 2016 hit with a bachata-friendly rhythm — a party track that teaches you to find bachata timing in pop music.
Why it matters
At any bachata social, the DJ will occasionally play tracks that aren't 'pure' bachata. Being able to find a bachata rhythm inside adjacent genres (vallenato, Latin pop, reggaeton-bachata blends) makes you adaptable and confident on the floor rather than frozen when a non-standard track plays.
'La Bicicleta' by Carlos Vives and Shakira (2016) is primarily a vallenato-pop track, but its rhythm has enough overlap with bachata that DJs frequently play it at socials, sometimes in remixed form. The song's driving acoustic guitar, clear rhythmic pattern, and infectious energy make it a crowd favorite. For bachata dancers, it's an exercise in adaptability: the rhythm isn't pure bachata, but you can absolutely find a bachata groove within it. This kind of musical flexibility is what separates rigid dancers from versatile ones.
Beginner
Play 'La Bicicleta' and try your basic step. You'll find it works — not perfectly aligned like with a traditional bachata track, but close enough. Focus on stepping consistently to the pulse of the music without overthinking whether it's 'real bachata.' This flexibility is valuable.
Intermediate
Compare the original 'La Bicicleta' with a bachata remix version (several exist on YouTube). Notice what the remixer changed: they probably added güira, bongos, and restructured the rhythm section. Understanding what gets added to make something 'more bachata' deepens your understanding of what defines bachata rhythm.
Advanced
Use non-bachata-adjacent tracks like this to practice rhythmic reinterpretation. Can you find the bachata within a cumbia? Within a reggaeton? The ability to impose bachata timing on different rhythmic frameworks is an advanced musicality skill that makes you incredibly versatile in social dancing.
Tips
- •Keep a playlist of 'bachata-adjacent' pop songs and practice your basic step to each — build your adaptability library
- •At socials, when a non-standard track plays, watch the best dancers — they simplify their footwork and focus on connection
- •Learning the rhythmic DNA of vallenato and cumbia helps you understand their relationship to bachata
Common mistakes
- •Refusing to dance when the DJ plays non-standard tracks — adaptability is a skill worth developing
- •Forcing complicated bachata patterns on a track that doesn't quite fit — simplify when the rhythm isn't pure bachata
- •Confusing vallenato rhythms with bachata rhythms — they're related but different, and acknowledging the difference improves your ear
Practice drill
Play 'La Bicicleta' (original version) and dance full bachata basic step through the song. Mark every moment where the rhythm doesn't quite align with your step — these are the adaptation points. Practice smoothing through these moments until you can dance the entire song comfortably.
The science▶
The ability to impose a familiar rhythmic framework on non-standard music demonstrates what neuroscientists call 'top-down rhythmic processing' — where the motor system's expectations actively shape auditory perception. Dancers who practice this become better at finding groove in any musical context.
Cultural context
The blending of vallenato, cumbia, and bachata reflects the interconnectedness of Latin American musical traditions. Carlos Vives revived vallenato much as Juan Luis Guerra elevated bachata — both artists took stigmatized rural genres and gave them global prestige. Their musical overlap at socials reflects their parallel cultural journeys.
See also
A DJ-blended track that transitions between bachata and another genre like salsa, merengue, or pop within a single song.
Bachata RemixA reworked version of an existing song — often a pop or R&B hit — restructured with bachata rhythms, guitar, and percussion.
Deja Vu (Prince Royce & Shakira)Prince Royce and Shakira's 2017 crossover bachata hit — a pop-bachata fusion with clear dynamics perfect for practicing energy shifts.
DJ SetA curated sequence of songs played by a DJ at a social or event — the set's flow shapes the energy of the entire dance floor.
PlaylistA curated list of bachata songs organized for practice, social dancing, or mood — building smart playlists is a secret weapon for musicality training.