bachata

Women In Bachata

Women In Bachata

I’ve compiled a Bachata playlist featuring 70 different women singers performing Bachata solos, duets and a few songs where the female voice is prominent. Some of these Bachatas are from Bachateras, singers who predominantly recorded in the genre. Other songs are from artists that primarily record in genres of music other than Bachata but recorded one or more Bachatas as well.

How To Dance Bachata

How To Dance Bachata

Do you want to learn how to dance Bachata? Perhaps you want to learn how to dance Bachata for fun, to connect with the music or culture, to meet friends, as exercise, or to enjoy time with a partner? Bachata dance can be learned from family and friends, cultural immersion, dance teachers, workshops or online classes. In this post I will share tips and videos so you can begin exploring Bachata dance, focusing on elements from the Dominican Republic.

Bachata Dance Rhythm in the DR - Bachata Dancing On Different Timings

Bachata Dance Rhythm in the DR - Bachata Dancing On Different Timings

There are some big differences with how Bachata is danced in the Dominican Republic in comparison to how it is taught around the world. One of the biggest has to doing with Bachata dance rhythm and timing. When Bachata is taught around the world the vast majority of classes teach students to dance "on 1," taking their first step on the first beat of the music and then marking, tapping, or touching the 4th beat. There is nothing wrong with dancing on this timing, but in the DR dancers can, and will start on the 1, 2, 3, or 4 in the measure. It is normal to see a floor full of dancers in the DR dancing to multiple timings.

What is "Bachata?" What does "Bachata" mean?

What is "Bachata?" What does "Bachata" mean?


Most of those familiar with the word "bachata" know it as a popular musical genre and dance form native to the Dominican Republic(DR). However, before it came to be used to refer to a genre of music it meant a "fiesta del patio" or an informal gathering of friends and neighbors where music was played and drink was often served. It was not until the early 1970's in the Dominican Republic that bachata came to describe a musical genre. It was first used as an insult, a disparaging term that impliee that the music and the people that listened to it were from a "lower" class, uneducated, crude, vulgar, and immoral. Today, to a great extent, the word has been "reclaimed" and currently has a much more positive connotation in the DR and internationally.