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The Hold
and the Moves
There is always
a small gap between the partners, unless they're doing merengue
- then they are very, very close. The man's right hand holds the
woman in the small of her back, palm flat. Her left arm is at ninety
degrees, palm up, and the woman's left hand lies flat on it.
The upper body
hardly moves, no singing shoulders, they just flow. All the singalling
and rapport comes through the arms. The hips move automatically
as a result of the shift of body weight from one side to the other
with the knee bent.
Basic Salsa
steps
The pattern
is eight steps, four to each foot, regardless of the dance sstyle.
The woman stands in front of the man - always a mirror image of
him. The first step is on the spot, a tap or a pause, "on the one",
then the nationalities divide at "the break" on the second beat.
Cubans pause,
then move backwards away from each other, pushing away by the palms
of their hands.
Colombians
do a kick or skip.
New Yorkers
move forward.
Merengue
Merengue moves
at a tremendous speed with a lot more movement than in salsa. It's
a sideways dance - left, right, left, right - with just two basic
steps to match the rigid 2/4 beat, but that can be interrupted with
forward moves.
Cumbia
The couples
hold each's hands out to the side, around waist level, and there
is a lot of hip movement, with the upper body stiff. Cumbias have
three steps, two with one leg, one with the other. The solid 2/4
beat is repeated like merengue. It is a fleet-footed, skipping dance.
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