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Brazilian zouk grew out of lambada in the 1990s and became its own deep, flowing partner dance — long extensions, head movement, sweeping circular patterns set to slow, bass-heavy music. It rewards connection and body awareness over fast footwork. US zouk communities are smaller and festival-driven, but intensely committed; once a city has a zouk scene it tends to keep it.

Zouk asks more of the body than salsa or bachata, especially head and spine movement for follows, so a beginner series matters more here than drop-in. Start with the basic and the elastic step; the dramatic head movement comes later and only with a teacher's eye. Expect a patient, technique-first community.

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Zouk in Syracuse

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