Daily Events & Parties

Timetable


Partner Dances
Salsa
Rueda / Casino
Bachata
Merengue
Street Cha Cha
Cuban Salsa
On2 Salsa
Argentine Tango
Afro Cuban
Zouk
Rumba
Cha Cha
Samba
Paso Doble
Jive
Slow Waltz
Tango
Viennese Waltz
Foxtrot
Quickstep

Non-Partner Dances
Ballet
Isolation
Jazz
Hip Hop
Reggaeton
Broadway
Tap

Health
Yoga
Pilates

Ladies Only
Belly Dance
Ladies Shine Salsa
Ladies Styling Salsa
Sensual
Exotic Dance
Pole Dance

Tots, Kids & Teens
Salsa
Hip Hop
Ballet
Isolation

Dance Programmes
Pro Course
Semi-Pro
Kids


Other Programmes
Acting
Modeling
Singing
Voice
Salsa Music
Make Up
Spanish Language
Video Editing
Documentary Production

 

Merengue was made the official music and dance of the Dominican Republic by Rafael Trujillo. Partners hold each other in a closed position. The man holds the woman's waist with his right hand while keeping his left hand/her right hand at the woman's eye level. The merengue is a two-step beat requiring both partners to bend their knees slightly left and right. This in turn makes the hips move left and right. When danced correctly, the hips of the man and woman will move in the same direction throughout the song. Partners may walk sideways or circle each other, in small steps. They can further switch to a double handhold position and do separate turns without letting go each other's hands or momentarily releasing one hand. During these turns they may twist and tie their handhold into intricate pretzels. Other choreography is possible.

Some say it was derived from the "paso de la empalizada" (pole-fence step). There are also legends about a limping war hero (or El Presidente of a banana republic himself, in some versions) who had to step in this way while dancing because of wounds, and polite (or clueless) public imitated him.

Although the tempo of the music may be frantic, the upper body is kept majestic and turns are slow, typically four beats/steps per complete turn.

In the social dancing of the United States the "empalizada" style is replaced by exaggerated Cuban motion, taught in chain ballroom studios for dances of Latin American origin (Cha-cha-cha, Rumba, Mambo, Salsa).