Bachata
Closed-to-Open Transition
Opening the door from home. The deliberate move from closed embrace out to an open two-hand hold — and *staying* there. The hinge between bachata's two worlds.
Also known as: opening the frame, breaking to open
This move builds: Timing …on the always-on four — Connection, Frame, Comfort, Posture.
- Entry
- closed embrace
- Exit
- open two-hand
- Tempo
- any
- Musical use
- filler
- Connector
- Yes — connects closed embrace → open two-hand vocabulary
- Level
- Beginner
- Cluster
- foundation-home
- Style
- Modern
What This Move Is
A clean one-way transition: from closed embrace, the lead opens out to a two-hand hold and the couple keeps dancing there. Unlike the Open-Close (B044), which opens and returns, this one commits to the open position — it's how you deliberately move the dance into turn territory.
Key Points
- Lead: Open by stepping back and offering both hands on a tap; give her the room to find the open frame. Don't snap it open — invite it.
- Follow: Step back with the lead and meet both hands at a comfortable arm's length. Settle into the open frame's tone.
- Timing: Open across 1-2-3, arrive in the two-hand hold on 4, continue the basic open.
- Common mistake: Treating it like Open-Close and bouncing back to closed. This one stays open — that's the whole point.
Style Notes
This documents the deliberate closed→open hinge. Its sibling Open-Close (B044) is a round-trip layer; this is a one-way transition that lands you in the open world. Knowing both means you choose when to open and whether to stay.
Chains into
After this, you can flow into…