You've finally nailed your swingout. Your basic Charleston feels natural. But at the social dance, you're still doing the same six patterns while advanced dancers seem to create magic in real-time. The gap between "knowing moves" and dancing Lindy Hop is where intermediate work begins — and it's less about learning more patterns than rethinking how you use what you know.
Many intermediate dancers fall into the same trap: accumulating dozens of moves without understanding how to adapt them to the music, their partner, or the moment. This article redefines what intermediate Lindy Hop actually requires and gives you concrete tools to accelerate your growth.
The Intermediate Trap: Why More Moves Won't Save You
Most dancers reach the intermediate level by learning patterns. They can execute tuck turns, passbys, and basic Charleston variations on demand. Yet something feels missing on the social floor — dancing becomes repetitive, musical moments pass unnoticed, and connection with partners feels inconsistent.
The problem? Execution without interpretation. At the intermediate stage, your goal shifts from "Can I do this move?" to "How many ways can I use this move, and why would I choose one over another?"
This requires developing five interconnected skills that transform pattern collectors into genuine Lindy Hop dancers.
Skill 1: Technique — Redefining "Knowing" a Move
Intermediate technique isn't about flash. It's about control, options, and adaptability.
Swingout Variations to Master
Rather than learning entirely new patterns, explore how the swingout itself contains multitudes:
- Outside turn vs. inside turn — changing rotation direction mid-flow
- Barrel roll — adding rotational energy through partnered arm movement
- Delayed send-out — manipulating timing to hit specific musical phrases
Charleston Integration
Seamless transitions between 8-count Lindy and Charleston rhythms separate intermediate from beginner dancers. Practice shifting between:
- 8-count swingouts into tandem Charleston
- Side-by-side Charleston into partnered turns
- Kick-through variations at different tempos
Pulse and Bounce Refinement
Your "bounce" should be adjustable — relaxed and grounded for slow tempos (under 120 BPM), crisp and energetic for faster music (over 180 BPM). Record yourself dancing to different speeds; visible tension in your shoulders or upper body indicates pulse inefficiency.
Drill: Practice swingouts at 60% speed with a partner, focusing exclusively on stretch and compression in counts 1-2 and 5-6. Eliminate momentum cheating.
Skill 2: Musicality — Hearing What Others Miss
Musicality separates dancers who execute from dancers who respond. Intermediate musicality requires understanding swing music structure, not just "feeling the beat."
The 32-Bar Framework
Most swing dance music follows AABA song structure — 32 bars total, with each section containing 8 bars. Learn to hear:
- Phrase beginnings and endings — natural points for movement initiation or resolution
- Breaks and stops — moments where the rhythm drops out, demanding improvisation
- Builds and releases — dynamic energy changes you can mirror physically
Tempo Adaptation
Your dancing should transform across the tempo spectrum:
- Slow (under 120 BPM): More time for styling, delayed rhythms, breathing between phrases
- Medium (120-160 BPM): Standard vocabulary, balanced energy
- Fast (over 180 BPM): Simplified patterns, efficient movement, Charleston integration
Jazz Style Awareness
Big band swing (Count Basie, Chick Webb) offers different opportunities than small combo or New Orleans traditional jazz. The former emphasizes brass hits and section interplay; the latter leaves space for conversational, call-and-response dancing.
Drill: Dance to one song daily for a week, noting where phrases begin. On day one, mark phrase starts with a simple step. By day seven, aim to initiate new movement ideas at these boundaries.
Skill 3: Connection — The Physics of Partnership
Connection in Lindy Hop operates through stretch and compression — elastic energy stored and released between partners. Intermediate dancers develop intentional connection rather than defaulting to whatever happens naturally.
Frame Development
Your frame — the structural relationship of your arms, torso, and core — should be:
- Responsive: Adjusting to partner's height, style, and energy
- Consistent: Maintaining integrity through rotation and direction changes
- Economic: Using only the tension necessary for the movement
Following Through vs. Executing Moves
Beginners often "place" themselves into position. Intermediate dancers maintain dynamic relationship with their partner, allowing momentum to complete movements rather than forcing them. This creates the floating, effortless quality visible in skilled dancers.
Drill: The "Spaghetti Test" — with a partner, practice basic















