Passai Sho
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All Comments (8)
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@MrNickjannini Shuri Te
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Damn that's old school. I felt like I was watching the 1800s for Karateka. Im shotokan WKF sport. Its really cool to see that. The wooden floors make it look so authentic. I love watching old versions of our style. that was amazing. It was rough, not fancy, and direct to the point. Sometimes we forget what Kata was originally for. Osu.
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Dai and Sho depend on your style. In Kobayashi Shorin-Ryu, Itosu no Passai is Passai Sho. The performer is not wearing a patch, so it's fairly difficult to figure out his style.
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No, this is deffinately Passai Sho. But yeah, I've learned it differently as well.
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this is passai dai
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good, but i've been taught to do it a little diffrent
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Oh, and no patches in Nakamura dojo.
cwh02482 1 year ago
Thanks for your comments. The performer is a student of Sensei Nakamura Ankichi, who teaches an old form of Shuri-te as learned from Sensei Nakama Chouzo (1899-1982). Nakama was a student of Chibana Choushin and Motobu Chouki. You can't read it, but there's a lineage tree on the wall behind the performer. If you send me your e-mail address, I'll send you a snapshot of it. (It's all in kanji, however.) And, yes, conventions on which is Sho and which is Dai of course vary between schools.
cwh02482 1 year ago