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Thursday, July 30, 2015
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Yang style Tai Chi Chuan
Chen Wei Ming (1881-1958) demonstrates an application of Yang style Tai Chi Chuan with his assistant Leung King Yu (1907-2003).
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Xingyi - Tang Sho Tao - Basic Exercises - Fu Hu Gong 伏虎功
Xingyi - Tang Sho Tao - Basic Exercises - Fu Hu Gong 伏虎功
Friday, July 24, 2015
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Sha Guozheng demonstrating Eight Posture Xingyiquan - 沙国政先生演示形意八式拳
Sha Guozheng demonstrating Eight Posture Xingyiquan - 沙国政先生演示形意八式拳
Monday, July 20, 2015
Saturday, July 18, 2015
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Shuai Jiao - Chinese Wrestling Leg Press (“Biting”)
Shuai Jiao - Chinese Wrestling Leg Press (“Biting”)
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Xingyi Quan of Li Luo Neng? (李洛能与形意拳)
Li LuoNeng Xingyi Quan (李洛能与形意拳)
Li Luo Neng was the founder of "modern" Xingyi Quan
Friday, July 10, 2015
Bagua Throwing Set Ups - Luo De Xiu - Yi Zong School
Xingyi & Bagua Throwing Set Ups - Luo De Xiu - Yi Zong School
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
Monday, July 6, 2015
Saturday, July 4, 2015
Xingyi Quan of the Chinese Army - Hunag Bo Nian’s Xingyi Fist and Weapon instruction by Dennis Rovere
This is an excellent translation and of Hunag
Bo Nian’s Xingyi Fist and Weapon
instruction by Dennis Rovere and Chow Hon Huen. Mr. Rovere has also filled
in some of the gaps about basic application, five elements theory and history.
As always, I would like to explain how I evaluate martial arts books in general
and Chinese Internal Martial Arts books specifically.
This book should be viewed as a
translation of an important historical document, not as a book to teach Xingyi.
It documents the re-adaptation of Xingyi back into a battlefield art. The
manual doesn’t contain the forms and other training pieces that most full
Xingyi systems do. It focuses on the five elements, linking forms and two
weapons. Many people complain of the lack of clarity in the pictures or lack of
applications. Mr. Rovere states in the beginning of the book that it was to be
used by instructors as a training reference,
the intention of the book was not to teach students Xingyi Quan. You cannot learn Xingyi Quan from a book; you
cannot learn Chinese Internal Martial Arts from You Tube. You have to spent time with a real
practitioner of the art. You can learn forms, you can even learn applications,
but you will never achieve real understanding.
The first section of this book is a
high level overview of:
·
five element theory
·
the five fists
·
the linking form
·
the Xingyi classics
Section two covers Xingyi training
in the Chinese Army, the Xingyi five elements and linking forms. Mr. Rovere
does a good job of augmenting the pictures from the original manual with
pictures of himself, explanations of postures and simple applications.
The most interesting part of the
book is the in-depth coverage of the two weapons, the bayonet and the cavalry
sword. The reason these are important is they are the application of Xingyi
principles for modern weapons. I believe anytime the principles are applied by
an expert in a modern context it helps to expose the roots and viability of the
art. Can the principles serve in another context and work well?
I believe the value of these
manuals, besides preservation for historic value, is to give the modern
Xingyi practitioner greater understanding of their style by adding depth and perspective.
Books on internal martial arts are generally survey in style - covering the
forms, history and general practices of that style. This book is interesting
and unique because it takes the principles of an ancient martial art and shows
its relevance in a battlefield context.
Owen Schilling is a 20 year
practitioner and teacher of Xingyi Quan, Bagua Zhang and Tai Chi Quan, a
lineage holder in the Yi Zong School and the lead instructor at Boulder Internal Arts in Boulder,
CO.