How to Do the Party Machine Hip Hop Dance Move

Introduction
The Party Machine is a popular move in hip hop dance styles like popping, locking, and breaking. It requires coordination, rhythm, and control to execute smoothly. The move involves kicking out to the sides while alternating between being flat-footed and on the balls of the feet, often accompanied by twisting hip movements and arm accents.
Video Demonstration
Dance History of The Party Machine
While the exact origins are unclear, the Party Machine gained widespread popularity in the hip hop dance scene in the late 2010s. It became a staple in dance battles, cyphers, and choreography, showcasing dancers' footwork skills and groove.
Step By Step Instruction
Start with feet shoulder-width apart, knees bent.
Kick your right leg out to the side, shifting your weight to the left.
Hop onto your right foot, bringing your left leg up behind you while twisting your hips.
Repeat the kick and hop sequence on the left side, twisting your hips in the opposite direction.
Continue alternating the kicking, hopping, and twisting movements in a rhythmic pattern.
Tips For Learning The Party Machine
Keep your knees bent and engage your core for balance and control.
Start slowly, focusing on the smooth weight transfer between each kick and hop.
Use arm movements to accentuate the rhythm and add style
Practice transitioning the Party Machine into other hip hop dance moves.
Conclusion
The Party Machine is a lively and energetic hip hop dance move that showcases footwork skills, rhythm, and groove. By mastering this move, dancers can build a strong foundation for improvisation and self-expression in hip hop dance styles.
More Hip Hop Dance Moves
If you liked the Party Machine, these moves share the same kick-and-hop alternating footwork and hip-twisting groove:
- 6 Simple Steps To Learn The Happy Feet — Happy Feet uses an almost identical side-kick-and-hop pattern as the Party Machine, but without the hip twist, making it the simpler prerequisite move to master first.
- How to Learn the Steve Martin Dance Move — the Steve Martin's side kick with a bounce shares the Party Machine's kick-out rhythm and the same late-80s/early-90s energy in battle and party contexts.
- How to Do the Monastery Hip Hop Dance Move — the Monastery is a footwork-centric move like the Party Machine, and both are used in battles and cyphers where clean, rhythmic footwork transitions matter.
- Mastering the ATL Stomp: Atlanta's Iconic Hip-Hop Dance Move — the ATL Stomp shares the Party Machine's stomp-and-hop structure and works well as a Southern-flavored alternative in the same freestyle sequence.
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