Added: 3 years ago
From: mediafreak001
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  • nice. Makes a change from bassai dai...

  • I've been looking for this everywhere to help me practice. Thank you. Just curious, why do you call it "Itosu no Passai"? I've only ever heard it called just Itosu Passai or Passai Sho. Is there a significance to the "no" or is it just another way to say it?

  • very good and strong (from a kugb student)

  • kyoshi laupp performance was great thank you for the video. not sure it should be here for all the world to see . but thank you again

  • @ShowYourWorking the shuto gedan barai (as we know in these style) has been abandoned in other kata too like piñan nidan (heian shodan for shotokan) and replaces for morote shuto uke, probably because is beter block a punch tana a kick

    with shuto

  • Please watch my ofher new uploads from Sensei Laupp´s Performances...have fun!!

  • @ShowYourWorking It is kake-te(circular hands)as mediafreak states. In orthodox Shorin-Ryu, we are taught to flow like water, water seeks it's own level. The next strike could be "Habu" or shooting sparrow of Enpi, or crane's beak of Hakutsuru. These hands also set up throws, arm locks/breaks, and if strung together with proper taisabaki(change body)-multiple ate-waza. I was doing this last week @ a TKD and the instructor told me "impressive" but I needed to "SLOW DOWN" !!!

  • @ShowYourWorking It all depends on what it is used for. In this kata it is two kakete's as mediafreak states, in succession(circular hands). In orthodox Shorin-ryu, you are taught to flow like water, water seaks it's own level. With proper tiasabaki (change body) this hand movement takes on many applications. Block, arm lock, set up for a throw. If a series is strung together, the hand could strike like "Habu", or snake also shooting sparrow, and cranes beak, like in Hakutsuru.

  • The Okinawans refer to this hand position as "Habu" after the native snake of Okinawa. So , snake hand maybe. (source was from Isamu Aragaki Sensei of the Kyudokan Shorin-Ryu).

  • It´s Kakete-uke in shidokan style...

  • Esta claro que hay montones de versiones diferentes de bassai

  • Muy bueno !!, me es de gran ayuda !!, excelente Sensei !! :)

  • Bonito kata Sensei, toda una vida dedicada al noble arte.

    Un saludo de Paris

  • my apologies power 08 ( and sensei ) if you were offended. as long time practioner i admit that those elements exist in kata for sure, but kata is mental training for fighting and you should train it with that spirit in mind. if doing slowly with deep breathing u do it VERY slow, not like this ( mediocre speed) . his kicks are very slow, it does not matter whatever u say. a well-trained practioner has several options to take him down from any kick presented here. oss.

  • let me share my opinion; he is very strong as well as his hand techniques but his feet and hip movements are truly slow ; karate works well when fast with precise timing. his ass would be kicked with any very skilled free fighter.

  • ccthedragon, by your comment i can say that you are not a karate-do practitioner, if ever knows only a little because you seemingly do not know the essence of KATA and how it shall be executed as a matter of self-training that involves the proper breathing (tandem), taisabaki, and other martial arts principles to manifest the inner power.

  • You only seem concerned with the politics of who is right or wrong, what louiemalf69 says is true, what matters is if the practitioner can master the meaning of what they are teacing, and pass it on to those who follow....the old masters did not look to the past, but were innovative, choosing and teaching their own foreseen benifits....check out McCartheysensei

  • louiemalf69: (part 2) Continuing, a 10th Dan is just one person for each school, who is the head of the school. Unfortunatelly there are some 6th or 7th Dans that left a traditional school to create his own one, promoting himself to 10th Dan. As explained before a sensei can be a sempai and viceversa, no matter which Dan. In our school Shorin Ryu Shidokan, Miyazato Sensei

    (10th Dan) says that anyone who is teaching in a dojo should be considered sensei as it would Miyazato himself teaching

  • louiemalf69: FYI a few corrections: SEMPAI means in japanese "older brother". We use it in karate schools as a respecful way to a higher ranks. I.E. a 5th kiu (yellow belt) is a sempai of a white belt, or a 7th dan is a sempai of a 5th dan. SENSEI means teacher/instructor. There are many Dojos with an instructor who is a 1st Dan or 2nd Dan, and he is a Sensei for his students. Also in any Hombu Dojo (headquarters) there are many senseis practicing as students and then going back to their dojos.

  • ok no doubt this guy is great. he's an 8th dan. he's been doing this for a very long time. im also a shorin ryu karate-ka. but i know that you are not considered a grand master until you are a 10th dan ( the highest rank.) you are considered a master from 4th till 9th dan. a sempai is a senior student not a sensei or a master... so there is no sempai in this video. now im not making fun of anybody i am just informing people that only a 10th dan is a grandmaster and sempai is a senior student.

  • louiemalf69: SEMPAI is a person of a higher rank than one's own, DOHAI is the same rank, KOHAI is a lesser rank.

  • good job sempai

  • The best ever seen

  • cool.

    das is unser großmeister !!!

  • looks like shito-ryu´s Bassai dai... i like the performance... osu!

  • CONGRATULATIONS Sempai Laupp on such a GREAT performance, one of the best on youtube! I learned this Kata from Miyazato Shoei Sensei and it is very much the same version, coming from Miyahira Sensei.

  • 8th dan sempai? ;)

  • Sempai is a respectful way of addressing someone of a higher rank.For me, he is a Sempai. My Sensei is Shoei Miyazato Sensei, having started Karate-do in 1969 under him. I do not even call his son, 9th Dan, Sensei.

  • Comment removed

  • Yes, I am. And if I have seemed disrespectful, I sincerely apologize, but it is just my personal custom, being it that I started practicing when I was 14 years old, to address only him as Sensei. It is great to find performances like this one on youtube, and to see that traditional Shorinryu, which traces back to a time when Karate Do was not yet a mainly commercial product or a sport, is very much alive.

  • The best perforamnce sensie..I'm from SHIDOKAN philippines...GO GO GO..SHIDOKAN!!THe best Martila Arts..

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