Practical Kata Bunkai: Final Shuto-Ukes of Bassai-Dai

preview_player
Показать описание

This video looks at the last three shuto-ukes ("knife hand blocks") as found in Shotokan's Bassai-Dai, Wado-Ryu's Passai, etc. A comparison with other versions of Bassai / Passai will reveal that the second shuto (the one where you are "not looking") is not there in most versions. It therefore seems to me that the "push" we see in other versions of the form has been stylistically over formalised into a distinct shuto-uke in the versions of the kata that posses that movement i.e. it is an "error" in transmission.

The bunkai sequence shown in this clip acknowledges that, but nevertheless makes use of the motion in a way that both fits with the modern version of the kata and uses essentially the same bunkai as the versions with the more subtle push. This enables the karateka to have an effective purpose for the modern version (i.e. the kata can remain as is) that also retains a connection to the underlying concept as demonstrated by other versions of the kata.

The video was filmed on my iphone at a seminar in Stuttgart, Germany. The clip is shorter than intended because I ran out of storage space! I nevertheless think the clip is easy enough to follow and should still give the general idea. As always, this short clip cannot explain the details nor can it show how such methods fit within the wider combative and training methodology. It is what it is :-)

All the best,

Iain
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Simple but genius great explanation for the last sequence! thanks Sensei Ian

markwoods
Автор

i love this and I want to mention and laugh at the fact that there is a mat 10 feet away that they could have used

drewnut
Автор

I would have never guessed that bunkai in a million years!

blockmasterscott
Автор

thanks for the teaching i find this usefull

sendtextmessageto
Автор

Love these techniques, real martial art though it's a bit over-stretching the kata. Shuto uke is a block as it can be seen in videos of Nakayama demonstrating the technique. And advancing with a block just doesn't make sense spatially. Ian should found his own style, much better than shotokan

MrFabiomassid