shinyu gushi – Pangai Noon karate weapon arts
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Sanchin Pangai Noon (Uechi Ryu) Vol. 1
Shinyu Gushi, the creator of this film, studied with all three of Kanbun Uechi’s most notable students: Saburo Uehara, Seiyu Shinjo, and Kanei Uechi.
Pangai Noon Karate originated in the training hall of Master Chou Tze Hou (1874-1926) in Fukien Province, China. Kanbun Uechi, an Okinawan student who received a teaching certificate from Master Chou in the spring of 1904, introduced the art to his motherland in the early twentieth century. Shinyu Gushi, the creator of this series of programs, is a pupil of the Founder’s most notable disciples; he so learned the art of Pangai Noon Karate directly and completely from the greatest conceivable sources. Pangai Noon is a vicious and lethal martial art with the purpose of self-preservation. It is a relic of more tumultuous times when justice was preserved by men with rapid hands and angry eyes, mocking recent advances that have made karate more popular at the expense of fighting effectiveness!
Pangai Noon (Uechi Ryu) Primary Methods & Kata Vol. 2
Kanbun Uechi refused to teach or show his fighting method until 1927, when he was requested to safeguard fellow Okinawan textile workers in Wakayama, Japan, from elements of organized crime. He kept what he had learnt in Southern China from the renowned Tiger Boxing coach Chou Tsu Ho a secret for reasons he would not even describe. It was only his duty as a martial artist to protect the vulnerable and punish those who ruthlessly abused them that caused him to change his mind.
Teaching a few select pupils in complete secret, he developed warriors that even the most audacious criminals would not challenge, delivering peace to his nation and preserving the continuation of an art that had appeared destined to extinction.
Shinyu Gushi, 8th Dan, demonstrates the core procedures of the style and its first three forms in this second installment of his series, the third with yakusoku kumite. Gushi sensei, who was trained by Kanbun Uechi’s son and senior pupils, upholds the founder’s legacy by teaching Pangai Noon only for self-defense. 30 minutes of running time
Primary Techniques of Pangai Noon (Uechi Ryu) Vol. 3
Shinyu Gushi, 9th Dan, began studying Pangai Noon Uechi karate with teachers Saburo Uehara, Seiyu Shinjo, and Kanei Uechi, the son of the founder of Pangai Noon/Uechi karate, in the early 1950s.
He still teaches individuals or small groups of pupils in private, believing that true karate should not be affected by the urge to recruit students or other economic factors. His craft, which he teaches, is undoubtedly ancient, with origins dating back to nineteenth-century China and beyond. Pangai Noon Uechi is a martial art in the traditional sense. This highly recognized teacher demonstrates it in its original, pure form, which is powerful, effective, and free of any indication of sporting attempt.
Pangai Noon (Uechi Ryu) Weapon Arts Vol. 4
This fourth installment of the Pangai Noon Uechi karate series starts with the advanced kata Sanseru and progresses to karate weapons training. Although karate is primarily an unarmed discipline, it also includes the use of items that were historically commonplace in Okinawan daily life as weapons. They provide a new depth to karate techniques when used by an experienced practitioner. The staff can be used to strike, thrust, and fend off an armed attacker; the oar’s blade can deliver a powerful, focused blow and can also be used to throw sand in the face of an enemy to distract or blind him; and the metal sai can be used offensively by striking and thrusting, as well as defensively by blocking and trapping. As the author demonstrates, even the hair decoration or jiffa, which was worn by all Okinawan males until the late nineteenth century, may be used to enhance the force of karate moves.
Vol.5 of Pangai Noon (Uechi Ryu).
Karate originally gained international attention when a Japanese military doctor noted that a handful of Okinawan recruits had physiques that were noticeably different from the ordinary recruit. Their aptitude as soldiers at a time when Japan was creating its first modern army led to the introduction of karate into the school system in the early years of the twentieth century. Since then, the practice of karate has been embraced by people of many nationalities, and it is ironic that the components of the art that led to its discovery, strength training and physical conditioning, have been almost totally forgotten to all but a handful of its most senior masters. This film shows the most ancient and profound mysteries of karate. How to generate unstoppable force, how to make weapons from the hands and feet, and maybe most importantly, how to establish the desire to overcome anything through traditional karate’s austere and sometimes mystifying training techniques.
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