Tarraxa Quadradinha
La figura cuadrada en Tarraxinha
TarraxaNivel: Principiante2 min de lectura2 citas
La Quadradinha —del diminutivo portugués de quadrado, que significa 'cuadradito'— es una figura espacial fundamental dentro de la tarraxinha, el subestilo lento en abrazo cerrado que surgió de la escena musical urbana angoleña.[1] La pareja ejecuta cuatro puntos direccionales —adelante, lateral, atrás, lateral— para trazar una huella cuadrada compacta en el suelo, manteniendo en todo momento el abrazo pecho a pecho o pecho a hombro que caracteriza el marco comunicativo de la tarraxinha.[2] El líder inicia cada impulso direccional mediante un desplazamiento compartido del peso corporal, transmitiendo la intención a través del contacto de torso y cadera más que por la presión del brazo o la mano únicamente; el seguidor responde con el pie espejo (opuesto al pie que avanza el líder) mientras recibe la señal direccional a través del contacto sostenido del abrazo. Los pasos son pausados: a los tempos lentos característicos de las pistas de tarraxinha, cada paso ocupa típicamente dos tiempos, distribuyendo la figura de cuatro pasos a lo largo de una sola frase de ocho tiempos. La figura puede iniciarse en cualquier orientación y puede rotar gradualmente en repeticiones sucesivas, lo que la hace bien adaptada al carácter compacto y estacionario del baile social de tarraxa; a diferencia del desplazamiento lineal en carril, requiere un espacio mínimo en la pista.[2] La figura se practica en toda la comunidad angoleña, entre su diáspora lusoparlante en Lisboa, París y otros centros urbanos, y en el circuito más amplio de festivales europeos de kizomba donde la tarraxinha se enseña como un subestilo diferenciado.[1]
Cómo se baila
Señales para líder y seguidor
ConteoFour steps across eight counts; each step occupies two beats. Counts 1–2: forward (leader) / back (follower). Counts 3–4: lateral step to one side (both partners). Counts 5–6: back (leader) / forward (follower). Counts 7–8: lateral step closing the square (both partners). The figure may repeat immediately from count 1 or may pause on count 8 before the next square. Gradual rotation across repetitions is common practice but is not metered to a fixed arc per individual square.
Líder
From close embrace (chest-to-chest or chest-to-shoulder), initiate the square with a forward step, transmitting the impulse through the shared torso frame (counts 1–2); step laterally to one side (counts 3–4), maintaining hip contact; step back through the body connection (counts 5–6); complete the square with a closing lateral step returning to the starting alignment (counts 7–8). Each of the four steps carries a brief hip settling before the next directional impulse is offered. Communicate every direction through torso and hip contact — not arm tension or hand pull.
Seguidor
Receive each directional impulse through the embrace and respond with the mirrored foot (opposite to the leader's): step back (counts 1–2) as the couple travels forward; step to the side (counts 3–4); step forward (counts 5–6) as the couple steps back; close laterally (counts 7–8), completing the square. Sustain continuous hip-to-hip contact throughout; do not anticipate the next direction before the torso impulse arrives.
Tiempo musicalMost comfortable at 55–85 BPM (slow tarraxinha and ghetto zouk tempos), where two beats per step allow full hip settling and body articulation between each directional impulse. Functional up to approximately 100–105 BPM on faster tarraxo or Afrobeats tracks, where each step compresses to roughly one beat; above that range, the figure's deliberate quality and hip articulation become difficult to sustain.
Aprende antes
Prerrequisitos
- Tarraxinha close-embrace hold: chest contact, relaxed arm frame, hip-to-hip connection
- Basic hip articulation and body-weight settling on each step
- Sensitivity to partner torso impulse and weight shift as the primary directional signal
Ten cuidado
Errores comunes
- Leading with the hands or arms rather than transmitting direction through the shared torso and hip contact — the hands in close embrace are connective, not directive.
- Stepping in metronomic equal time without pausing for the hip settling that completes each count before the next impulse is offered.
- Collapsing the square into a diagonal or a two-point oscillation by shortening or skipping the lateral steps, so the couple never traces the full four-corner pattern.
- Follower anticipating the forward step (counts 5–6) before the leader's torso initiates it, producing a gap or collision rather than unison travel.
- Allowing the embrace to open between steps, losing the continuous body contact through which direction, weight, and timing are communicated.
No confundir con
Movimientos que se confunden
- Salsa or bachata 'box step': traces a similar square floor pattern but employs a break-step accent against the beat and an open or semi-open frame; the Quadradinha is body-led in sustained close embrace with no break accent.
- Brazilian Zouk 'quadrado': a similarly named square figure that uses a flowing, inclined upper-body connection distinct from the upright, chest-contact frame of tarraxa.
- Kizomba lateral two-step figures: share the close-embrace format but oscillate laterally between two points rather than progressing through four directional corners to trace a square.
Por el mundo
Otros nombres
Angola and Portuguese-speaking diaspora (Luanda, Lisbon, Paris)
Quadradinha
The canonical attested name; Portuguese diminutive of 'quadrado' (square), describing the square footprint the couple traces. This is the originating term, not a translation of an English source name.
Referencias
- 1.Tarraxinha — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 2.What are Tarraxinha, Tarraxa, Tarraxo? Are they different from Kizomba? - Discovering Kizomba — discoveringkizomba.com
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Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Tarraxa Quadradinha. Bailar Biblioteca. Recuperado el 29 de junio de 2026, de https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/tarraxa-quadradinha
Bailar Editorial Team. “Tarraxa Quadradinha.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/move/tarraxa-quadradinha. Consultado el 29 de junio de 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “Tarraxa Quadradinha.” Bailar Biblioteca. Consultado el 29 de junio de 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/tarraxa-quadradinha.
@misc{bailar-move-tarraxa-quadradinha, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Tarraxa Quadradinha}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/tarraxa-quadradinha}, note = {Consultado: 2026-06-29} }
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