Time Out (Sydney)

How to do Salsa clubs

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Seductive sounds andan moves come alive in Sydney every nightn of the week. By JordanKret­chmer

While Strictly Ballroom did much to promote Latin dance in Australia, you’d have been hard pressed to find more than one or two salsa schools in Sydney back in the early ’90s. Today, there are dozens of schools and somewhere to dance every night of the week. Why is salsa so popular? Mainly because it’s a very social activity. There is a real community around salsa dancing and at a profession­al or performanc­e level everyone is on a first-name basis. It’s also fun, a form of exercise, improves your dance skills and has a sexy, spicy edge. ‘Salsa’ is Spanish for sauce, after all.

If you're a complete beginner, a couple of classes are necessary to learn the basic steps and gain confidence. You can either enrol in a course at a dance school or try out a couple of casual classes at a club, no partner necessary. Salsa is an improvised dance; this means the bigger the repertoire of steps in your head, the more you have to draw from on the dancefloor. Even experience­d dancers go to classes to learn new combinatio­ns and work on their technique.

Once you've got some basic moves under your belt, you’re ready for social dancing. Prepare for some intimidati­on the first time you walk into a salsa club – it’s like stumbling onto the set of a musical. Not only is everyone scarily good but the music is much faster than it would be for a class and it may be all you can do to keep up. Don’t be dishearten­ed and remember that practice makes perfect; drop in regularly to any of these salsa nights (see sidebar, right) and eventually your hips will be putting Shakira and Ricky Martin (or at least your mates) to shame...

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