Koryu Uchinadi Vol.5 Kata Applications
By Patrick McCarthy – International Ryukyu Karate Research Society
IRKRS Koryu Uchinadi Kata Bunkai Volume – Open seminar in Antwerp, Belgium Part 1
Before the advent of modern Karate, there existed a remarkable martial arts in Okinawa referred to as Ryukyu Kempo Toudi-Jutsu.
Simplifed for the purpose being put into Okinawa's turn-of-the-century school system to build robust bodies and militaristic mentalities, in support of Japan's escalating war machine, Ryukyu Kempo Toudi-Jutsu ultimately became influenced by Japanese Budo culture which transformed the revised practice into a sport and cultural recreation.
Koryu Uchinadi Kempo-Jutsu is a unique collection & functional re-interpretation of old-school tegumi grappling drills & those embryonic Fujian-based quanfa practices once secretly cultivated before the development of the modern tradition.
Re-systematized into a cohesive & completely application-based study, it came about as a result of researcher, author and master instructor, Patrick McCarthy, fusing together the principal teachings from many of this tradition's most celebrated pioneers.
Having studied the art since childhood, Patrick McCarthy is one of the few non-Japanese master-level instructors regularly invited to teach kata application, pressure point theory and the history of traditional Karate all over the world.
A former world karate champion, a published re-searcher and a professional teacher, McCarthy Hanshi spend years in Japan researching and developing a simple yet effective way through which to teach the functional application principles of kata.
This informal video presentation is the first of three tapes highlighting the December 2000 open seminar in Antwerp, Belgium.
This seminar-style presentation kicks off with a 30-minute commentary on technical theories, application practices and the historical premise of kata, by Patrick McCarthy.
The main body of the tape is dedicated to learning a two-person close-quarters drill that features the elbows, knees, head-butting, joint-locking, thigh kicking and bumping into a single practice.
The rest of this informal video presentation covers two unique takedowns and follow-up ground control, several applications for the hand-position and bunny-hops of Chinte kata, joint manipulation, a few pressure points and cavity seizing for pain compliance control.
Packed with educational value, this informal presentation is not a step-by-step “how-to” instructional video, but rather, made for those who participated in the seminar for the purpose of reviewing what they had already learned.
Language: English
Running Time: 121 Minutes
IRKRS Koryu Uchinadi Kata Bunkai Volume – Open seminar in Antwerp, Belgium Part 1
Before the advent of modern Karate, there existed a remarkable martial arts in Okinawa referred to as Ryukyu Kempo Toudi-Jutsu.
Simplifed for the purpose being put into Okinawa's turn-of-the-century school system to build robust bodies and militaristic mentalities, in support of Japan's escalating war machine, Ryukyu Kempo Toudi-Jutsu ultimately became influenced by Japanese Budo culture which transformed the revised practice into a sport and cultural recreation.
Koryu Uchinadi Kempo-Jutsu is a unique collection & functional re-interpretation of old-school tegumi grappling drills & those embryonic Fujian-based quanfa practices once secretly cultivated before the development of the modern tradition.
Re-systematized into a cohesive & completely application-based study, it came about as a result of researcher, author and master instructor, Patrick McCarthy, fusing together the principal teachings from many of this tradition's most celebrated pioneers.
Having studied the art since childhood, Patrick McCarthy is one of the few non-Japanese master-level instructors regularly invited to teach kata application, pressure point theory and the history of traditional Karate all over the world.
A former world karate champion, a published re-searcher and a professional teacher, McCarthy Hanshi spend years in Japan researching and developing a simple yet effective way through which to teach the functional application principles of kata.
This informal video presentation is the first of three tapes highlighting the December 2000 open seminar in Antwerp, Belgium.
This seminar-style presentation kicks off with a 30-minute commentary on technical theories, application practices and the historical premise of kata, by Patrick McCarthy.
The main body of the tape is dedicated to learning a two-person close-quarters drill that features the elbows, knees, head-butting, joint-locking, thigh kicking and bumping into a single practice.
The rest of this informal video presentation covers two unique takedowns and follow-up ground control, several applications for the hand-position and bunny-hops of Chinte kata, joint manipulation, a few pressure points and cavity seizing for pain compliance control.
Packed with educational value, this informal presentation is not a step-by-step “how-to” instructional video, but rather, made for those who participated in the seminar for the purpose of reviewing what they had already learned.
Language: English
Running Time: 121 Minutes
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