Salsa Dancing and The Three Types of Followers

Salsa dancing Brooklyn.

Dance classes in Brooklyn. Ray and Stephanie salsa dancing.

Salsa followers can be broken down into three types: 1)passive 2)active and 3)mischievous.

A passive salsa follower does what the leader wants.  Only that, and nothing else.  Take her into a cross body lead and she will follow, but with no styling at all.  She follows all your salsa steps, but doesn’t add anything additional to the dance.  Most beginner salsa dancers are passive followers.

An active salsa follower will add some flair.  She will comb and whip her hair, do arm and hand styling, and shoulder shimmies.  She is taking an active part in the salsa dancing.  She is following just like the passive follower, but is adding her own flair.  When you see a salsa dance class labeled as a women’s styling class, they are trying to turn passive followers into active followers.

A mischievous follower knows the step that you are leading her into, can do it if she wants to, but chooses not to.  She does something else that works, but not exactly what you wanted.  For example, if you lead a peek-a-boo step, instead of stopping when you want her to, she’d duck under and turn out.  If you lead a copa with a turn and a half, she might keep spinning more than you expected.  If she knows there is a break in the music, she will hit it even if you weren’t going to.  In order to be a mischievous follower, you have to be very good at following and know the music very well.

When salsa dancing, a leader should be accommodating to all  three types of salsa followers.  If a woman has just started salsa dancing, she will most likely be a passive  follower.  If she has taken some salsa dance lessons for a few months she may have developed into an active follower. You find active followers at most salsa dance schools socials.  If she has put her time in, practiced, taken lots of private salsa lessons, gone salsa dancing all over and really gotten good, she may be a mischievous follower.

 

Salsa Dancing. Keys to Following

Salsa dancing in Brooklyn at Dance Fever Studios Park Slope location.

Beginner salsa class in Brooklyn.

Salsa Dancing.  Becoming a Better Follower:

I’m a proud, strong, independent Hispanic woman.  My leader on the dance floor could care less.  All he wants to do is lead me on the dance floor without a fight.  Ladies, I know that this can be difficult  being who we are, but it really is just a matter of letting go,  and putting our trust in our leader.

To be a great follower we must remember that we have the easy job.   We don’t have to think or worry about anything except the music and styling.  We just get to enjoy the ride.  Let him think about the steps.  Most of the time followers think way too much.  We try to guess what the leader wants us to do.  Most of the time we are wrong.  We try to read his mind and anticipate his moves.  We need to relax and not think.  We need to feel and see what our leader wants from us.  When he is relaxed you should be relaxed.  When he give you tension you give it back.

A follower needs to pay attention and look at the leader.  Don’t look at his feet, your feet or the floor.  Keep your head up and pay attention to his torso and lead signals. A follower shouldn’t try to help.  Hopefully he knows what he wants and how to lead you there.  If you’re not sure what to do,  the default step is your basic in place.

A follower needs to relax.  Don’t get tense or grab for dear life.  Don’t grab his hands. Keep your palms facing down, elbows in front and away from your body in a good salsa dance posture.  When you are tense and grabbing the dance becomes more like a shoving match and less like salsa dancing.

Finally.  Have the right attitude.  Don’t be a miss know it all.  If you get a leader at a lower level than you are, let him lead his steps.  Don’t start doing whatever you want.  That’s bad following.  Like Penny told Baby in “Dirty Dancing,”  “Let him lead You”  So don’t be the Baby at the beginning of the movie, be the Baby at the end.  She had the time of her life.

Please view some of our salsa dancing and salsa lessons on our Youtube channel.

Salsa classes in Brooklyn

Best salsa songs to learn to by tempo

You’re a new salsa student and you’re having trouble finding songs to practice and learn to.  You check on Youtube and

Dance Fever Students dancing salsa in NYC club.  Dance Fever is a top salsa studio.

Latin couple dancing salsa in NYC club.

Google for songs but are having trouble.  You want not just good salsa songs, but ones that are good to dance to.   Aquanile is great, but not so much for beginner salsa dancer.   La India has some nice songs, but not the best for dancing.  There are many great songs, but you want ones without long intros and a bunch of breaks.   You also want the songs broken down by tempo.  Slow for practicing the stuff you just learned.  Maybe medium tempo for the stuff you almost have, and faster for the stuff you have mastered.  So, here’s the list you’re looking for.  Broken down by very slow, slow, medium and fast.

VERY SLOW:  Melao de Cana/Celia Cruz,  Porque Yo/La33,  I like it Like That/Pete Rodriquez,  Mi Media Mitad/Rey Ruiz,  Mi Son Cubano/Roberto Torres,  Que Lindo El Punto Cubano/Roberto Torres,  En El Barrio/Son Boricua,  Catalina La O/Pete Rodriguez,  Estan Quemando la Cana/Yuri Buenaventura

SLOW:  Te Falta Ritmo/Calambuco,  No Me Acostumbro/Rey Ruiz,  Perdoname/Gilberto Santarosa,  Esa Mujer/Tony Vega,  Siempre Sere/Tito Rojas,  Eres/Santiago Cerron,  Sobredosis/Los Titanes,   La Lave/Latin Vibe,  Y Volver/Latin Fusion,  Amigo Mio/El Gran Combo,  La Magia de Tu Besos/Grupo Niche,  Maria Teresa y Danilo/Hansel y Raul,  Entregate/Maelo Ruiz

MEDIUM:  Otra Oportunidad/Jimmy Bosch,  Yamulemao/Joe Arroyo,  Tu Amigos O Tu Amante/Sabrosura,  Buscandote/The Latin Brothers,  Caballo Viejo/Roberto Torres,  Micaela/Sonora Carruseles,  Juliana/Cuco Valoy,  Mata Que Dios/Cuco Valoy,  Casi Te Envidio/Andy Montanez,  Antidoto y Veneno/Eddie Santiago,  La Cura/Frankie Ruiz,  Llego El Amor/Gilberto Santa Rosa,  Que Paso/Hansel y Raul,  Cali Pachanquero/Gupo Niche

FAST:  Me Libere/El Gran Combo,  Sabor a Melao/Tabaco y Ron,  Ven a Medellin/Grupo Galla,  Vamonos Pal Monte/Son Boricua,  Lady/Orquesta La Palabra,  Baracuaniguara/Africando,  Dejate Querer/Jose Alberto,  Mi Negra Su Calentura/Grupo Niche,  Tiene Sabor/Henry Fiol

 

 

 

Difference between salsa on1 and on2

 Salsa studios Brooklyn. Dance Fever Studios salsa class.  The premier salsa dance studio in  Brooklyn.

Salsa lessons in Brooklyn at Dance Fever Studios.

I have heard so many bad explanations of this from salsa dancers and also,  even teachers,  that I need to write this.  The only difference between salsa on1 and on2 is the beat you are breaking on.  On1 you break forward on the 1st beat in the measure of the music.  On2 you are breaking on the 2nd beat in the music.  This is the difference.  There aren’t any different steps, or better steps in on1 or on2.  You can do all the same steps.  There aren’t any different shine in on1 or on2.  You can do all the same shines.   One isn’t better or worse than the other.  There are just as many great on1 dancers as on2.

On1,  the first two beats are quick quick.  You pause or hold the 3rd and 4th beat.  On2,  the 2nd and 3rd beats are the quick quick.  You pause on the 4 and 5.  That’s the slow.   So in on1, the first part of your basic is within the measure of music.  On2, you split the measure of music in your basic.  The pause is between two measures.

Now, on2 has two ways of starting.  You can just break straight  forward with the leader’s left on the 2nd beat, or the leader breaks back with his left foot, then breaks back again with his right foot on the 2nd beat.  The first way the leader is breaking forward on the 2 and back on the 6.  The second way, the leader is breaking forward on the 6 and back on the 2.

If you really want to be good, learn how to do both on1 and on2.   This will really develop your timing and musicality.   Once you learn both, you will understand what I am talking about.  Take a look at the attached Youtube link to see on1 and on2 basics demonstrated.  You can see more video on our Youtube chanel.

Improving your salsa dancing

Salsa dance studios Brooklyn.  Dance Fever Studios is a top Brooklyn salsa studio.

Salsa class in Brooklyn at Dance Fever Studios.

Improving your salsa dancing

Here are some tips to help both leaders and followers become good salsa dancers.  1)THE MUSIC is number one when you dance.  Listen to it.  It has two parts: rhythm and melody.  First, concentrate on the rhythm or beat.  You must dance to this beat, or there is no way you will become a good dancer.  You actually want to feel as though you are dancing behind the beat.  Even fast salsa music, when you get really good, is not that fast;  so don’t rush.  Stay with the tempo.   The majority of beginner salsa dancers tend to rush the tempo.  They are ahead of the beat.  A good way to slow yourself down is to practice salsa basics to cha cha music.   Just leave out the cha cha.  This will definitely slow you down.   If you are dancing to one tempo,  and your partner’s on a different tempo,  there is no way you will have a good time.  This is the single most important thing.  The melody or the tune is the second part of the music.  This is a lot harder to dance to, and will only come with lots of experience and knowing the music.  Eventually, you want to dance to both.

2)BODY MECHANICS: Each type of dance has a specific way of moving.  If you don’t move that specific way, you won’t look good dancing to that music.  You can’t dance salsa and look like a tango dancer or ballet dancer.  It doesn’t look right.  You need to have that salsa look and feel.   There are a lot of elements that make a salsa dancer look like a salsa dancer.  Two of the most important are Cuban motion and the figure eight.  You can see these two things explained and demonstrated on our Youtube chanel.   You need to have both motions wired to look and dance salsa well.  Do not spend another second learning a new “advanced step” before you have these motions down pat. Salsa dancing isn’t salsa dancing without these two motions.

3)Stay in your DANCE CIRCLE.  If you stand on one leg and allow the free leg to naturally hang down so that it just touches the floor, then make a circle with that free leg around your body without any stretch, this is your dance circle.  Stay in it when you dance.  This will make sure that your steps are the right size.  Large steps are a not good. You should be dancing with your body and not your legs.  The body moves the legs and not the other way around.   Smaller steps will also help your balance.

4)DON’T GRAB.  You want to be connected to each other with a very light touch.   The leader is not there to be your balance beam.  You don’t want to grab  on to him on every other step.  If you have trouble with your balance don’t wear 6 inch heels.  Wear flats until you are able to dance in heels.  And for the leaders.  You aren’t doing judo.  A good leader doesn’t need to throw the woman around.  You should be able to led a good follower in almost every step with one finger.  When you are leading and following the right way, it will take almost no effort.  The wrong way, and it feels like a wrestling match.

5)DANCE at each others ABILITY.   A great leader when dancing with a beginner, will only do steps she can do.  Taking her into steps that are beyond her ability is bad leading.  If you haven’t danced with a woman before, build the dance.  Start with easy stuff, and get more and more advanced.  Don’t do a cross body lead with a turn before you have led her in a simple cross body.  This is building the dance.  If you’re an advanced follower, and you agree to dance with some beginner guy, don’t expect him to be Johnny Mambo.

6)ADVANCED DANCERS:  Dance with people who are better than you.  This is true for any field.  Want to raise your chess game or boxing skills, you’re not going to do it with people at a kindergarten level.  This is sometime hard to so since advanced dancers usually have no interest in dancing with beginners.  So the best way to do this is by taking privates.  With one on one instruction, you can work on all your problem areas at your own pace and get out of any bad habits and be prevented from developing any new ones.

7)PERFECT PRACTICE.  Practice makes perfect is one of the most untrue phrases I have ever heard.  Practice all day long the wrong way, and you will do it the wrong way.  Go to the golf range and see all the golfers practicing their bad swings and never getting any better.  They are just enforcing that bad swing.  This is a problem with many dancers.  They get in bad habits and dance with other dancers who have the same bad habits.  Grabbing, steps too large, rushing the timing, poor body mechanics is no way to dance.  When you learn something, make sure you learn it exactly the right way,  and practice it exactly the right way.  If you don’t, you are only enforcing bad habits.   Remember, only perfect practice make perfect.

Dancing in Brooklyn:

Salsa classes in Brooklyn

Salsa class in Brooklyn, NY. at Dance Fever Studios

Salsa classes in Brooklyn at Dance Fever Studios

SALSA DANCING IN MOVIES:
Students always ask me, “which movies can I see some good salsa dancing in?”  So, here’s a list of salsa dancing in movies that I know of, or can remember. If you know of any more that you’d like to include,  add them in the comments.

1) Dirty Dancing: The funny thing about this film is the song that Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey dance to is not a salsa.  It’s really a hustle.  But who cares,  it’s the movies. Earlier in the film, Swayze and his blond partner dance to “Johnny’s Mambo”, which is a salsa.  This song is good for performances.  Lots of accents and breaks in the music.

2)Dance With Me:  Some nice salsa dancing and better salsa music than Dirty Dancing.

3)Shall We Dance: Has a bit of salsa dancing, but is better to watch if you’re looking for tango and ballroom.

4)Salsa: This is actually the title of the film, and it might be the best of the bunch. The entire film focuses on salsa dancing. It’s kind of a Dirty Dancing and Saturday Night Fever combo. Check out the 80’s big hair style. This film also has some very good salsa music.  Celia Cruz, Willie Colon, Grupo Latino, Grupo Niche, Tito Puente and Charlie Palmiere are some of the contributors.

5)Salsa y Amor: This is a French movie about a classical pianist who must hide his secret love of playing salsa music. Eventually the salsa wins out. The film has some nice dance scenes and better salsa music.  If you can think of any more, please let me know.