Added: 1 year ago
From: sixd0ts
Views: 66,048
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (66)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • i guess 2 people got their asses kicked by a wing chun fighter !!

  • Thanking for posting this. With all the different variations of this form,it is great to see the original from one of the best families in M.A

  • i practice my piu sau much closer to the mid body. hmmm

  • thank you for the video

  • Good thing I learned the original form. Amazing video

  • This form of Siu Nim Tao has some differences from Wing Tsun's Siu Nim Tao as i see

    But Yeah every style has it's own differences between the other styles :)

  • This is so awesome, thanks for posting this! There are so many variations of this form its nice to see a good example of the traditional form

  • I'm starting wing chun the 22nd and it's my birthday in 3 days so thnx for the vid I'll be practising this every day :D

  • what track it is?

  • Oh wow, this is yip man.

  • @tilerxy fail its not Yip man, its one his son, probably Yip Chun but im not sure at 100%

  • @FuDiep yes, it is Yip Chun :)

  • Yup, that sure is Yip Chun!!!

    

  • Thats not Yip man but Yip Chun.

  • @yzotop111 Yip chun is the oldest son of Yip Man. Yip man is who they made the movies after, and who was also Bruce Lee's trainer.

  • Hi, why do some start with 3 hand strikes (up, down, up then back) and others with 2 (up, down then back)?

  • he seems to slow... he should build up speed.. he will never beat anybody this way...maybe cause he is old...i should be more careful respecting elders...

  • @Stjepan1607 These forms are ment to be slow to develope the mind and body. it should take at least 40 minutes for the complete from to be done. you should not try to learn this unless you learn the history and philosophy on wing chun first. And if you dont know how to breath dont practice this. There is more to this form then the movement you retard. But something you will never know because you dont spend 10 hours a day practicing.

  • @machinehead110

    LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL...i was just joking... and now i'm retard... heheheh...

  • @machinehead110 I am SOOOO taking 10hrs a day practicing this. #fortherecord :-D...okay okay, more like 3.

  • @Stjepan1607 this message is a bit late,and i don't know if anyone answered yet,but i will.

    The Siu Lim Tao is meant for beginners to understand the basics of Wing Chun,and for the experts to keep their abilities,it makes you understand the principle of the center-line.

    If one wants to be strong,one has to be serious,and to be serious one must do it slowly.

  • To say Wing Chun Kuen Fist is painful is the wrong statement to make!it's painful when you don't practice and run into a situation when Wing Chun Kung-fu just could save you from being embarrassed,as that would be painful my friend!!the Late Grandmaster Moy Yat used to remind all of us that the hand that blocks also punches.remember Wing Chun Kung-Fu is about being calm and in control,you must learn to relax  as you flow.....

  • Comment removed

  • @waaza0 you posted that 6 months ago can i ask u which grade u have and what u are learning now?

  • pak u dis is ip chun or yip chun

  • @TheG2Z same people

  • @kingmir5 i know.. damn kids these days.. but he's not Yip man! look it up the title -_-

  • GM Ip Man left China for Hong Kong not because of the Japanese but because of the Communist Chinese. During the second Japan-China War GM Ip Man left to live with his friend Kwok Fu and returned to Foshan after the war. GM Ip Man studied Wing Chun when he was 13 from GM Chan Wuh Shun. Three years later when GM Ip Man was in Hong Kong for college, Gm Leung Bik the son of GM Chan's teacher Leung Jan defeated GM Ip Man after he told Ip Man his forms were sloppy. GM Ip then became GM Bik's student

  • Ip Chun who was born in 1924 studied Ip Man branch of Wing Chun he was six years old. he is now 87 which means he has been doing Wing Chun for 81 years. Ip Chun's father, the GM, died in December 1972 and entrusted the film footage of his Siu Nim Tao, Chum Kiu and Muk Yan Jong to Ip Chun. Ip Chun founded in 1968 the Wing Chun Athletic Association and was its Chairman. Even at 87 he still teaches. Both GM Ip Ching and GM Ip Chun were born in Foshan, China contrary to Ip Man 1 and Ip Man 2 .

  • Not all Wing Chun branches have the Siu Nim Tao form. The Siu Nim Tao form was created by the Red Boat member Leung Yee-Tai, along with the Chum Kiu and Biu Tze forms. Wing Chun branches can be thought of as describing both the differing traditions and interpretations of Wing Chun, and the teacher-student relationships which perpetuate them. Unlike Shotokan with its JKA there is no sanctioning body for Wing Chun that governs certification of lineage, nor an unambiguous way of defining lineage.

  • Also, although many of the movements are similar, Siu Nim Tao varies significantly between. Some branches view the symmetrical stance in the form as the fundamental fighting stance, while others see it as more a training stance used in developing technique. Depending on the translation the form can mean little imagination, little idea or little practice which is a odd name for a most important form teaching the basic rules of balance and body structure, the alphabet for the system.

  • Some Gms not wanting to pass thier knowledge to a non-family member have let thier art die in antiquity. Who knows what arts have been lost because of this. And how many styles have only pieces of a art. many times a Gm will hold back something in oder to turn it over to a successor and if there no successor it is not passed over. A reletive of mine is a GM of a style and will not name a successor because no family member is avialable to take over and feels his senior students not worthy.

  • Thanks for the vid it helped me remember a bit, does wing chun teach you to control your chi? I've read that it can but I'm not quite sure thanks for any help

  • I wonder if someone has video of Bruce Lee doing Wing Chun forms.

  • this is the way this form should be done, ip man way. his diciples do it differently from the GM because they are doing it thier way and not Ip Man's way.

  • @naumutroi i dont think hes doing the form properly at all, theres no structure, he is punching downwards, as oposed to straight out, his wu sau colapses every time he draws the hand back, i know hes ip mans son, but i personally dont rate his form very highly at all, ive seen many people do it better, i know theres different versions such as leung tings, fongs, etc, but the movements and structure are no different, wong has a clip on youtube, he does this form 10 times better.

  • @singhakabuttar Master Wong is the student. He learned it from the GM Ip man and was the GM Ip Man top student. Master Wong is expected to do well being the GM Ip Man top student. But Wong's form would not be what it is nor would he have learned and mastered the art and science of Wing Chun if not for the GM Ip Man. It is difficult to tell if Gm Ip Man did this vid doing his best or was done casual. In any event, GM Ip Mans way is the best way.

  • @naumutroi excuse me sir! this is not ip man, its his son ip chun!!!

  • For example, there are some people who will listen to Roy Orbison and not be impressed by his singing, songwriting or musicianship. But others like "The King" Elvis Presley worshiped the gorund he walked on. Elvis repeatedly stated as did others like Bruce Springsteen, that Orbison was a role model and inspiration to them.

  • @naumutroi ip chun is the son of the GM Ip Man. Lived all his life with his father. Who better than him knows about his father's style other than master Wong. That is why most martial arts styles are handled down from father to son or some other family member. The Hung Gar style is the Hung family style. If the GM does not have a child who is interested or is of proper level then a senior student is chosen or one of the GM's generation is considered to be chosen.

  • It looks easy because its easy.

  • Beautiful....

    and yes it hurts.

  • Beautiful....

    

  • @waaza0 This is the form. It looks easy because he's a grandmaster who's been doing this every day for 60 years. Keep on training!!

  • @waaza0 I had the same problem in the beginning, with TaiJiQuan. I wasn't strong enough or relaxed enough to stand on spot while doing ZhanZhuang or "sphere exercises" to stand for half an hour straight with no pain.

  • Besides the vid really loving the song, anyone know who it is by?

  • seems all his disciples do siu lim tao a little different

  • Thank, helpful...

  • Great video thanks!!!

  • wow, this is very useful.

    thanks a lot!

  • thank u. This is very helpful. so i can learn mor outside of the school

  • thanx for posting!!! this will be really helpful for me!!

  • Comment removed

  • in the backward move in the 3td move, isn t it like that that you have to relax totaly your hand and then move forward , i always see different sifus doing this move different and wonder what is right or wrong , i can see that he´s does not let his hand fall he moves the hand into that position , my sifu told me let your hand fall and fully relax move forward ( watch 2:20 and the move wich comes ) i am sorry for my english , i have my problems to say it exactly

  • @GonG108 you mean fook sao? my sifu also tells me to let my hand fall.

  • @joemoney420 yes, far as i can see he does not let his hand fall

  • @GonG108

    i think u have to let fall ure hand in a relaxed way or not?

  • @CwalkBlaze this is what i tried to say

  • good video.

    Must i practice every day the full viedeo?

  • excellent video thank you for posting. Is this really Yip Man? I cant believe this footage is so clear!

  • @joemoney420 this is yip chun his oldest son

  • Cheers -- I'm doing grade 2 tomorrow :s

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more