Suelta - move

Suelta is a solo timba"> timba dance style that is more grounded and contained than despelote — a cooler, more controlled individual expression that still responds directly to the music.

What It Is

Suelta means "loose" or "free" — a partner dance that has been released (suelto/a) into solo form. Where despelote is explosive and chaotic, suelta is more deliberate and musical — the dancer is still improvising freely, but with more body control and rhythmic precision.

Suelta often appears as a middle ground: after a partner dance section, the music opens up, but not all the way into full despelote intensity. Suelta allows the dancer to respond with individual expression while maintaining composure.

Movement Character

  • Lower center of gravity — the body is grounded, weight slightly forward
  • Hip movement — smooth, rolling hip motion rather than the sharp percussive accents of despelote
  • Upper body relaxed — arms and shoulders move naturally rather than being driven by isolated accents
  • Footwork — closer to son-based step patterns than the flat-footed rumba base of despelote
  • Musicality — like despelote, suelta responds to the music's specific moments; unlike despelote, it does so with more subtlety

Suelta vs. Despelote

Suelta Despelote
Energy level Medium–high Maximum
Body quality Smooth, controlled Explosive, percussive
Footwork base Son-influenced Rumba-influenced
When triggered Build sections, lighter coros Full bomba, high-energy coros
Feel Cool, musical, precise Raw, expressive, chaotic

Both are valid responses to the music — the choice between them depends on what the music is asking for in that moment.