Ryoi Shintowa-Ryu JuJutsu Club / Traditional Japanese Class
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- Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
- Ryoi Shintowa-Ryu is a traditional japanese jujutsu club based in Bury St. Edmund, Suffolk. The training session here showcases what's involved in this traditional martial art.
A traditional Jujutsu martial arts class filmed on the fly as the class ran. We operated two cameras, vastly different but that's all I had. The Panasonic GH5S was on a gimbal and the G80 was attached to Sigma 18-35 and this was mainly used as action was frantic. The Sigma did well in low light but matching clips was challenging. The light from the club was abysmally fluorescent.
In the end next time we may stage a lot of the stuff and light it properly. But hey, this time it's all real :)
You have a very nice tradtional Jujitsu club going there. Great to see that you keep to the tradtional Japanese ways of the dojo- Reigi Saho and your waza is very effective. Keep up the tremendous work. Best wishes from Zambia
Thanks Jonathan, this is actually a friend of mines dojo who I used to train with. Will pass on your kind compliments.
@@swallowmedia what is the name of the instructor? A box appears at the end of the video and blocks his surname. Is he still actively teaching?
@@simontraversy5363 Hi Simon, his name is Gary Sallows and yes he is still teaching. He has a club in Suffolk, UK.
Excellent work keeping traditional jujitsu alive. I also train and teach Japanese Ju Jujitsu (katho Ryu).
It's spelled Jujutsu.
Really nice traditional training. I've also been practising traditional japanese jujutsu (Ushogy ryu yawara jutsu) and 80% seems kind of the same but we don't use coloured belts.The respect to the traditions and the training seems also very similar.
This is the rawness of actual Japanese martial arts. Not just some fancy sports stuff. Love it.
what amazes me the most about traditional jujitsu is that it has a lot of the aikido moves, with the difference that it is more elavorated and more effective too of course, draws my attention big time.
Aikido and jujutsu are similar in forms but the objective is way similar. While aikido is meant to repel attacks trying not to harm, traditional jujutsu is meant for killing the opponent.(We have to keep in mind that this was created during the war in japan, to fight unarmed against armed opponents, and that is why lockdowns were very useful as they were having armor).
@@adrianbocanegra7116 very practical techniques even today, will always prefer traditional jiujitsu style because to be honest i am not a big fan this bjj movement there is nowadays.
@@alanarroyo7139 I agree with you, not a fan of bjj either. I admit its complexity but I don't find it amusing to watch nor useful for fighting several opponents. At the end, that's the real goal of a martial art, to survive.Also, is very interesting to appreciate the differences between the ancient jujutsu systems or ryus, it's not only a martial art but also a cultural and historic art.
@@adrianbocanegra7116 i agree, it is a very technical art but you cant pretend to be on the floor the whole time, eventually they will have to learn to stand up.
You do realize that aikido is a derivative of jujitsu (specifically Aikijujitsu) but was made to be less violent and reflects the values of Shinto religion. Much like how judo is a derivative of jujitsu made safe for sport.
I would love to find a dojo and style of Ju Jitsu just like this. If only this Ju Jitsu Kai had a dojo in my area of Gloucestershire
Nice to see people and a dojo who know how to properly spell "Jujutsu".... Yet I find it interesting that commentors continue to spell it incorrectly (jiu-jitsu, jujitsu, etc). Amazing how ignorant people can be despite the internet. Or perhaps I should say because of the internet.
whats the connection between this school ( Ryoi shintowa ryu) and Koryu school called "Ryoi Shinto ryu"?
Is this school related, with the ancient traditional Ryoi Shinto Ryu? Is it a related version?
Me gusta mucho vuestro club yo tambien entrené ju jutsu
adoro il Ju-jutsu.
Awesome 💮
Muito obrigado 🙏🏾
What school / style of JJJ is this ?
I've learned some sort of kung fu tinted variations of some of this stuff but do you know anything about Brazilian jiu-jitsu? Specifically do they keep any of the standing locking techniques? I feel some situations it would actually be the disadvantageous to be on the ground.
not sure what sensei says but I did BJJ for 4 years and soon found out standing locks didn't translate. completely different as standing you will require to break balance first, with a 10 ton person on you very difficult - so you find BJJ ways. yes very disadvantageous to be on the ground, taught to get up quick. Having said that, BJJ is very effective in a 1 on 1 situation. Early Gracie BJJ had many standing techniques from old school jiu jitsu in their program, but has mostloy gone amiss in favour of the sport aspect.
What belt are you in BJJ?
Can I ask, the mainstream BJJ channels are claiming the Triangle choke was invented in the early 1900's. Or atleast that's when it was first done in Judo. I am not sure I believe them and would like to know more about the Japanese Jiu Jitsu history with the Triangle/Sankaku Jime technique.
Sankaku shimi was around for centuries before the Brazilians developed judo ground fighting. Another lie in the bjj hype.
It is spelled Jujutsu. That's your first lesson.
@@thetruthhurts7500 You are german aren't you? You know.. I train the art shown in the video and I like to read some books. I got myselt the book: "Ju-Jutsu 1x1 - Jubiläumsausgabe - 50 Jahre Ju-Jutsu in Deutschland" and this book claims that the JuJutsu spelling is a purely german thing.
@@ecki0800 Jujutsu is not a german thing, its the proper romaji for the kanji 柔術
@@justinholloway5210 oh nice, thanks. Then the book claims wrong stuff :D
Does this class in the U.K teach with free sparring or has the free sparring been removed?
Do you have any openings for new students to learn self defense? I am looking for any master to teach me so I don't get bullied by anyone or get threat for someone or some people who might want to steal not just my wallet but maybe my belongings or my life
If you contact the sensei at the end credits he may be able to help you. UK though
@@swallowmedia any in the USA I can learn here where I reside
@@jerryvang094 Hi Jerry, I’m sure there are plenty of good JuJutsu schools in the US. Many American serviceman learnt the arts while stationed in Japan. If your looking for self defense most JJJ will have that in the syllabus. Some of the more traditional schools may just be interested in preserving the old ways so it may not be useful. Ask them what their focus is before joining and maybe go and watch a class to see if it appeals to you. Ideally you want a nice mixture of traditional training and modern self defense plus a robust Ne-Waza element.
Good luck
Sparring?
Jujutsu techniques
Were is this Club based?
アメージング!
W il jujutsu
domain expansion!
Japanese Hakenkreuz Flag Japanese Hakenkreuz Flag Japanese Hakenkreuz Flag Japanese Hakenkreuz Flag
Essentially
Looks like penchak silat
Are you sure?
Naah this reminds more of Ninjutsu, the black uniform and some of the techniques.
Nope. Similarities but different.
Not bad. None excel. Mediocre equivalent of green belts.
Green belts in what Jack?
Looks to me like a short clip of a normal lesson, no fancy stuff for the camera just decent honest everyday training, which by the way takes confidence to show on YT , because there’s always someone whose going to criticise without knowing the content