Salsa

Cross-Body Lead with Open Break

SalsaIntermediateCross-BodyBothconnector

The rubber band. A cross-body that stretches apart at the end instead of collapsing back — and that stretch becomes free energy for whatever comes next.

This move builds: Frame & Lead-Follow Clarity …on the always-on five — Connection, Frame, Comfort, Posture, Consent.

Tutorial by Dance DojoWatch on YouTube ↗
Entry
open, L-to-R, facing
Exit
open, two-hand or L-to-R, facing
Tempo
medium
Musical use
filler/accent
Connector
Yes — connects open, L-to-R, facing → open, two-hand or L-to-R, facing vocabulary
Level
Intermediate
Cluster
Cross-Body
Style
Both

What This Move Is

A cross-body lead where, halfway through, you stop travelling toward her and instead travel away — opening the frame so the two of you stretch apart into an elastic pull. Same opening and clearing as a normal cross-body; the twist is the ending, which leaves you both apart with a loaded rubber-band ready to snap into the next move.

Key Points

  • Lead: Hook the right foot behind the left on 5, cross the left in front as you head right, and on 7 be fully open — feet apart, soft pull through the extended left arm. Don't keep travelling toward her or you'll crowd the connection.
  • Follow: Same footwork as a plain cross-body, with one change — on 7, anchor in place. He isn't coming to you, so stepping toward him would collapse the stretch; hold your ground and let the arm extend to a clean length.
  • Timing: Open and travel through 5-6, the apart-break lands on 7; recover and resume on the next 1.
  • Common mistake: Yanking the arm to create the stretch. The stretch comes from your feet moving apart, not your hand pulling — soften the hand and let the distance do it.

Style Notes

That loaded apart-position is the whole point: it's the launch pad for a copa, an inside turn, or a free spin. Lead it clean and you've turned a plain cross-body into a springboard.

Chains into

After this, you can flow into…

Learn these first

One way to flow