0:15 - hip roll 0:35 - manton 1:00 - consecutive body waves 1:26 - break forward + impulse 1:44 - big body wave + reverse 2:27 - isolations 2:52 - bounce 3:22 - side wave 3:50 - chest isolations 4:09 - fall 4:40 - chest circles 5:08 - walking body wave 5:27 - side wave together 5:51 - hip pendulum 6:15 - head roll
I recently started to learn Bachata, and I did not know what a shadow position was, so this video was extremely helpful. I love how you guys dance, keep it up! :)
My Favorite dancers! I really enjoy watching and learning with You, thanks to You I understand all the body positions, leading and everything, thanks!!! For that, I would like to see a tutorial from some of this moves especially #6 isolation 🤗💪🏻🔥
Hello and thanks for you're tutos. What are the rull's steps when the lady is in shadow position ? The leader must do the1234 on the right ? Same when the follower is back of the leader ? Thanks bachata is magic.
Awesome video! How to correctly lead drop in shadow position? I was just dancing with a girl at a social like 10 minutes ago and struggled with that move (on the bright side continuous waves and reverse wave worked 😄). I am able to lead bringing the woman’s arms up. But from there things go haywire because I think I’m not correctly able to signal her to drop. Any tips greatly appreciated. Thanks!
@@RobertoyMagdalena I don´t mean the position, I mean the step. I´m asking, because I learned that in shadow leaders assume the direction of the follower, so the go to the right on 1, otherwise she would be confused because she usually goes to the right on one and to the left on five🤔
In number 6 (Isolations), I noticed that you’re moving your body forward and back, as opposed to in chest isolations, where you’re isolating your chest (kind of like breathing in and out). Can the hip -> body isolations be performed by doing hip chest forward, chest back -> hip back? I ask this because I suck at leading my own isolations and it throws my partner off balance sometimes when I try to do pinza+circular chest isolations with them (unless they are back leading, in which case I pat myself on the back for making it work lol).
There are different types of isolations. This means that normally: when you are doing only chest isolations, then you don't change your weight and only open up and close your chest. The same happens when you are doing only hip isolations (you don't change the weight). However, if you are mixing them up, normally we start to slowly change our weight on each isolation. This is kind of like if we were doing a body wave, but only the isolations