🎧 Introduction
In the first article, you learned how to identify key musical elements:
✔️ The pulse
✔️ Breaks and pauses
✔️ Texture and emotion
Now, we go deeper.
True musicality isn’t just about hearing the beat — it’s about becoming a part of the music. Instead of following the rhythm like a passenger, you're learning to respond as if you’re an instrument in the band.
It’s about choosing your moment — sometimes waiting, sometimes surprising, sometimes echoing.
This article gives you tools to express music more creatively and personally.
🔍 Shift Your Focus: From Beat to Energy
Most dancers start by stepping to the beat. And that’s great. It gives structure and keeps your timing steady.
But once you’ve mastered the beat, it’s time to explore energy — because energy tells the story.
Let’s look at three specific musical energies and how to reflect them in your dancing:
🎶 1. Build-Ups
These are moments when the music starts to grow — the intensity rises, instruments layer in, tension builds.
How to dance it:
- Add intensity in your body
- Use micro body isolations (tighten torso, sharpen steps)
- Grow in size or height (subtly rise, lean, extend)
🎧 Try it with:
▶️ "Bye Bye" by Impar - (VersuS feat. Slimane - Bye Bye (Kizomba Remix)
Listen from 1:00 — feel the soft climb in energy and let your body mirror that build-up.
🧘 2. Breaks / Drops
These are powerful moments when the music empties out — the beat may disappear, and silence or vocals take over.
How to dance it:
- Pause
- Breathe
- Use slow, suspended movements
- Let silence be part of your movement
🎧 Try it with:
▶️ Elji Beatzkilla - Miss Future
This track includes noticeable pauses and drops, allowing you to experiment with stillness and suspended movements during these moments.
🎸 3. Individual Instruments or Vocals
Instead of dancing to the beat, follow another voice in the song — guitar, synth, vocal line, bass.
How to dance it:
- Use specific body parts: chest for bass, shoulders for vocals, arms for guitar
- Mirror the texture of the sound (smooth = waves, staccato = isolations)
- Try “shadowing” the sound instead of stepping to the beat
🎧 Try it with the song we already listened in the previous article:
▶️ "Lembra" by Mika Mendes
Focus on the vocal lines in this song, letting your body movements mirror the nuances and emotions conveyed by the singer.
🧪 Mini Practice: One Song, Three Interpretations
This is one of the most powerful musicality drills you can do — no partner needed.
Step-by-step:
- Choose a song with rich texture.
- 🎧 Suggestion: "Something Good" by Nelson Freitas
- Play the song three times:
- First, dance only to the beat
- Second, dance only to the vocal line
- Third, dance only to the bass line
- Reflect:
- Which felt most natural?
- Which challenged you?
- Which version of you emerged in each round?
▶️ "Something Good" by Nelson Freitas
Exploring the demo performance 👇
Let’s dive into what is likely the most iconic Kizomba demo ever recorded — Isabelle & Félicien dancing to “Mil Pasos.” With over 40 million views and more than a decade of admiration, this video remains a timeless reference for musicality, connection, and expressive movement on the dance floor.
▶️ Isabelle & Felicien - Soha Mil Pasos (Kizomba remix)
🎧 What to Focus On in This Demo
1️⃣ Intro & Build-Up – Calm Connection
- What’s happening in the music: The intro is soft and builds slowly.
- What dancers do: They keep movement minimal, walking slowly, breathing with the music.
- Your takeaway: Don’t rush! Let your body reflect the gradual rise of energy.
2️⃣ Vocals – Expressiveness & Layering
- What to listen for: The singer’s voice has emotional tension and flow.
- What dancers do: They respond not just to the beat, but to the phrasing of the vocals — slowing down, elongating steps.
- Try this: In your practice, follow the singer’s sentence lengths, not just beats.
3️⃣ Rhythmic Accents – Play & Contrast
- What to listen for: Small percussion hits, syncopation, subtle breaks.
- What dancers do: They occasionally hit accents with shoulder rolls, taps, or quick foot changes.
- Practice idea: Pick 2–3 small movements and match them with accents. Do them after the sound hits, not on top — like an echo.
4️⃣ Breaks & Pauses – Stillness as Expression
- What to listen for: Musical dips or silences (especially around 2:30).
- What dancers do: They freeze or slow down dramatically.
- Your challenge: Can you show emotion with no movement? Silence creates anticipation — use it.
5️⃣ Ending – Resolution and Soft Landing
- What to notice: The ending becomes lighter, more melodic.
- What dancers do: They mirror that softness — smaller steps, gentle turns, intimate finish.
- Your goal: End like a sentence — don’t just stop, resolve the story.
🧘 Solo Practice Flow: Energy Mapping
- Watch the video multiple times, each time focusing on a different layer: beat, voice, instruments, pauses.
- Record yourself dancing to this song. Try:
- One version on the beat only.
- One reacting to vocals.
- One interpreting pauses and accents.
- Compare your movement choices to those in the demo.
🎯 This builds awareness and responsiveness — the key to dancing with musicality.
❓ FAQs: Musicality Edition
“What if I’m not sure what the bass line or vocal line is?”
Use headphones. Focus your ears on one sound. Start small — even following the claps or piano keys is a great first step.
“Is it okay to ignore the beat sometimes?”
Yes — intentionally. Musical dancers weave between structure and freedom. It’s about choice, not chaos.
“What if I look weird?”
You won’t. You’ll look like someone who’s genuinely dancing the music — and that’s magnetic on the dance floor.
🔁 Coming Next in the Series
In the upcoming articles, we’ll dive even deeper into musicality — with more examples, insights, and practical explanations to help you grow as a dancer.
💬 Final Words
Musicality isn’t about adding more movement.
It’s about adding more meaning.
By learning to dance the energy, not just the beat — you become part of the song’s story.
🕊️ Now go listen. Your next move is already in the music.
Want more practice watching videos with a focus on musicality?
Check out this demo by Laurent & Adeline from 2017. Every movement they make is deeply connected to the music — and that’s exactly what to pay attention to.
🎯 Don’t focus on the technique or specific steps. Instead, notice how each step, pause, and transition reflects the sounds, accents, and flow of the song.
This kind of mindful watching helps you understand the core principles of musicality — how to listen, what to listen for, and how to translate music into movement.
🎯 Don’t focus on the technique or specific steps. Instead, notice how each step, pause, and transition reflects the sounds, accents, and flow of the song.
This kind of mindful watching helps you understand the core principles of musicality — how to listen, what to listen for, and how to translate music into movement.