i've been cerocing for 12 years, the shoulder spring is the meatiest of beginners moves but its on the man to lead, at all ceroc venues this move one is taken very slowly ,but eventually it goes into what is called muscle memory, its a mans right hand move but i go into it with double hands--just an add on which as you get more experienced there are many add ons to varies moves, my advice is to take it slowly, go to the workshops if you can afford which i did and when more confident try the improvers work shops, that set me really off in leaps and bounds, i'm now a really confident dancer far more then the quivering wreck when i first started,i put is this way, i can dance a very long tune without repeating a single move, not boasting, its me putting in a long amount of lessons, its said if you only learn one move then thats fine and i agree with that, on a personal note i prefer to dance in the silc style which is dancing to slower music but ofcourse loads love the fast music
It is the same but this isn't a very good example of it as this Lead doesn't use a consistent step. Your basic step is supposed to be actually keeping a good rhythm & pattern but he doesn't. Certainly far better examples than this one
@@perekorangiherewini-teawa3839This sexy man is right. Ceroc should be danced with a constant step, weight transferring on each step, to each beat. I find the footwork to be very lazy in this video and not a good example of Modern Jive fundamentals.