Bachata
Hip Bounce (Dominican Up-Down)
The feeling that makes bachata *bachata*. A soft, knee-driven bounce that lets the hip drop on every beat. Get this and your basic stops looking like walking.
Also known as: the bounce, up-down, Dominican groove
This move builds: Consent & Floor Etiquette …on the always-on five — Connection, Frame, Comfort, Posture, Consent.
- Entry
- closed embrace
- Exit
- closed embrace
- Tempo
- any
- Musical use
- filler
- Connector
- No
- Level
- Beginner
- Cluster
- sensual-bodywork
- Style
- Dominican
What This Move Is
Not a step — a feeling layered over any step. As you transfer weight, let the knee soften and the hip drop, so there's a gentle up-down pulse on every count. This is the engine under the whole dance; it's why grounded bachata looks alive and stiff bachata looks like marching.
Key Points
- Lead: Drive it from the knees, not the shoulders. The bounce lives below the waist; the frame stays steady so it doesn't jostle your partner.
- Follow: Find your own bounce — you don't borrow this one from the lead. It's your groove, on your side of the frame.
- Timing: A soft drop on every beat (1, 2, 3, 4…), deepest as the weight lands.
- Common mistake: Bouncing the whole torso up and down. Keep the chest level; only the knees and hips pulse.
Style Notes
This is a layer — it sits on top of any move and never breaks the chain. Teach it early; it's the single biggest upgrade to how a beginner's bachata feels. Pure Dominican in origin, but it lives under every style.
Chains into
After this, you can flow into…