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

 

Paso Doble or pasodoble is a lively style of dance to the duple meter march-like pasodoble music. It actually originated in southern France, but is modeled after the sound, drama, and movement of the Spanish bullfight. Paso doble means "two step" in Spanish.

Traditional

Pasodoble is based on music played at bullfights during the bullfighters' entrance (paseo) or during the passes (faena) just before the kill. The leader of this dance plays the part of the matador. The follower generally plays the part of the matador's cape, but can also represent the bull or a flamenco dancer in some figures.

Ballroom

Paso Doble, like Samba, is a progressive International Latin dance. The Paso Doble is the Latin dance most resembling the International Standard style, in that forward steps are taken with the heel lead, the frame is wider and more strictly kept up, and there is significantly different and less hip movement.

A significant number of Paso Doble songs are variants of España Cañi. The song has breaks in fixed positions in the song (two breaks at syllabus levels, three breaks and a longer song at Open levels). Traditionally Paso Doble routines are choreographed to match these breaks, as well as the musical phrases. Accordingly, most other ballroom Paso Doble tunes are written with similar breaks (those without are simply avoided in most competitions).

Because of its inherently choreographed tradition, ballroom Paso Doble for the most part danced only competitively, almost never socially — or at least not without sticking to some sort of previously-learned routine. This said, in Spain, France, Vietnam and some parts of Germany to the west of the river Rhine, it is danced socially as a lead (not choreographed) dance.