Hi, hope you are good. We have some steps on other vídeos, and we have a community on patreon.com/joinangola, there we have regular classes. We can have private classes that we Will work according on you situation.
Normalmente o líder começa sempre com a esquerda, pelo menos foi o que aprendi, porque aqui neste caso começamos com a direita? obrigado abraço de Portugal
I'm a bit lost that the instructor seems to be starting on the right leg instead of the left for several steps except the Basic. I thought leaders starts with leg!😬
Hi! So sorry we had missed your comment until now! No, the leader starts with the right leg, mostly because that's how you get out of the retrocesso - that is the bridge between a step and the other... at least, that's how we learn/teach it. Have you learnt it differently? Where?
@@JoinAngola Well, that's rare. All dances that I've seen online, in classes..and even military drills all start on left leg. There are few when it's the right leg going backwards. Like on the count 5 in salsa; count 5 in Bachata; on count 3 Zouk from the French Caribbean; on count 1 in the Brazilian Zouk a friend teaches! Also, on count 1 to prepare for a turn in Salsa/Cumbia. I'm not a professional not even a novice dancer. I just try to move with the music!😂
@@JoinAngola hey, hey... I love what you do!! BUT, Ian is right.... 99.9% of what is being taught OUTSIDE of Angola, in Europe, including Portugal is where the leader starts with his LEFT leg and follower with her right. I watched a few of your videos, so I understand how you do things, but, having danced kizomba/semba for a number of years 99% of time everything starts with leaders' left leg - unless we get some "crazy" Angilan, then he would mess it up for us a little :D :D :D Example: Female Saida (lady exit is done starting with a leader stepping forward with his left and then right and taking lady out - if that makes sense. I could send you some examples.... I watched your videos and I love all that as, even though, I know all those moves, looking at you doing it... I need to think, think, think :) my habitual ways are not working. :) Anyway... keep up your work... it is GREAT!!!!
Excellent. Russia is watching you
Great! Спасибо
Lovely dance, I would like ti learn more steps
Hi, hope you are good.
We have some steps on other vídeos, and we have a community on patreon.com/joinangola, there we have regular classes.
We can have private classes that we Will work according on you situation.
Thanks for your lesson teacher.
so easy but they look so beautiful
thank you!! ❤️
Normalmente o líder começa sempre com a esquerda, pelo menos foi o que aprendi, porque aqui neste caso começamos com a direita? obrigado abraço de Portugal
gostei bastante,espero um dia poder conhecer sua
escola..
Obrigado! Você onde se encontra?
Tb eu
Muito bom, gostei bastante deu-me vontade de aprender a dançar, quero juntar-me a vós. Onde estão localizados (na Cidade de Benguela), em que parte.?
Epa! Sò demos conta da mensagem agora, pedimos muitas desculpas! Estamos no cine kalunga, de segunda até quinta, das 18.30 até as 20.30
Olá olá... Espero que estejas bem, depois de 3 anos, já começou as aulas de dança? Um forte abraço.
Muito criativo👏👏👏
Obrigado!! 👍🏿🙌🏿
Hi! Very good class! I can know which is the title of the last song please? :)
Kakixaca Bangão
@@sassakizomba9003 thank you very much!
You start by yr right leg or it's a miror effect from yr video ?
Good video... like like like👍🏿
The leader starts with the right leg, the follower with the left! 😃
@@JoinAngola obrigado
@@leeyang1398 de nada! *"obrigado" is said by men, women say "obrigada"
by the way, is the "giro" what you had called "virgula" in the other comment?
I'm a bit lost that the instructor seems to be starting on the right leg instead of the left for several steps except the Basic.
I thought leaders starts with leg!😬
Hi! So sorry we had missed your comment until now! No, the leader starts with the right leg, mostly because that's how you get out of the retrocesso - that is the bridge between a step and the other... at least, that's how we learn/teach it. Have you learnt it differently? Where?
@@JoinAngola Well, that's rare. All dances that I've seen online, in classes..and even military drills all start on left leg.
There are few when it's the right leg going backwards. Like on the count 5 in salsa; count 5 in Bachata; on count 3 Zouk from the French Caribbean; on count 1 in the Brazilian Zouk a friend teaches! Also, on count 1 to prepare for a turn in Salsa/Cumbia.
I'm not a professional not even a novice dancer. I just try to move with the music!😂
@@JoinAngola hey, hey... I love what you do!! BUT, Ian is right.... 99.9% of what is being taught OUTSIDE of Angola, in Europe, including Portugal is where the leader starts with his LEFT leg and follower with her right. I watched a few of your videos, so I understand how you do things, but, having danced kizomba/semba for a number of years 99% of time everything starts with leaders' left leg - unless we get some "crazy" Angilan, then he would mess it up for us a little :D :D :D
Example: Female Saida (lady exit is done starting with a leader stepping forward with his left and then right and taking lady out - if that makes sense. I could send you some examples.... I watched your videos and I love all that as, even though, I know all those moves, looking at you doing it... I need to think, think, think :) my habitual ways are not working. :) Anyway... keep up your work... it is GREAT!!!!
4:10
4:13
Ñ liguem estou a treinar😂
Coloco a velocidade no 0.5
E seleciono o minuto dos passos que estão difíceis para mim
Ok 😂😂😂