I believe MSR has the largest number of students and mostly from the ZNIR or ZNKR organization. So it should be pretty similar. I've seen one very different MSR. Even the way the noto is different.
Thank you. I have just started Iaido, and your video has been a great help. There are so many subtle moves, which are so easy to miss when being shown. This has broken them all down nicely. Again, thank you.
Outstanding presentation! Great visuals, angles, humor, plus cool jazz music. I watched with great interest and enthusiasm and am able to relate to all that you present in this great lesson. Domo arigato gozaimashita! Respectfully, Marcus DeValentino, Okinawa Kenpo DSSI
I enjoyed the video, im primarily interested in the different techniques between styles. I've been doing Toyama Ryu, and we have some pretty big conflicts with your technique. I'd be interested in hearing your style's reasoning. The 3 big differences i think would be the angle of the sword during noto, the grip on the tsuka and the grip on the koiguchi (sp?) In my style, during a chiburi/noto the sword blade and saya are pointed up(similar to the draw position) and the grip (while not a deathgrip) is still maintained steady(and not directly mentioned the tsuka is pointed towards the opponnent usually directly in front). The reasoning behind the two is so that while sheathing if an enemy were to attack, the tsuka is pointed directly at the enemy and the blade can be drawn and cast in a downward strike with gravity at the attacker. The goikuchi grip i dont think was ever really focused on heavily, but from personal practice i usually have my pointer finger and thumb right at the edge of the saya, we draw the blade in almost the same, using the web of the finger, but with your method i feel it would be a much higher risk of getting cut, especially using a shinken. I only use the webbing of the hand to feel the back of the blade, once the tip slides off it falls into the saya. I've seen many students guide the blade with a finger but i feel it opens them up to getting a nasty slice if they miss. Not to mention putting extra moisture on the blade and rusting it. I'd be interested to hear your take on these differences. Maybe we have differences we can learn from. Regardless, i liked the video and your technique is very smooth. Thanks for the upload.
Sorry I don't know why RUclips didn't notify me of your comments, missed it till now. Its a long one 😅 but I'll answer the noto first atleast - I haven't no definitive proof but I believe the reasoning why we noto horizontally is because it comes from the Muso Shinden Ryu koryu style - and being one of the contributors of seitei it's probably a way to teach sayabiki control
@@NamazuRyuSaiken thanks for the reply! Saiyabiki control is a big learning point in Toyama Ryu as well. After thinking on it a bit the horizontal noto has the same potential to strike in suihei as the vertical noto has to mako. Its interesting to see different styles interpretation and implementation of their arts. If you're interested I can share some videos.of.our style.privately so we can compare and discuss. Regardless keep up the great videos and promoting the art =D
A good clear video for Noto. Love the little "fight sequences" 😂 Also enjoyed the last tip. I practice Eishin ryu and for us all of these principles are the same, only we do the noto vertical as opposed to horizontal as I'm sure you're aware of. However I believe especially for Seitei that most if not all of this is applicable. Thanks for the video.
I have seen styles where they move the sword subtly and instead the saya moves forward to meet the tsuba, and when they get together, the whole katana moves back to the obi, to me, that one looks elegant
As a new student, your video help me practice correctly between lessons
Keep up the good work
Domo
thank you! hope im glad my videos makes a good reference to help in your own studies!
Nice to see that both of our MSR basics are exactly the same only difference I am being taught in Canada.
I believe MSR has the largest number of students and mostly from the ZNIR or ZNKR organization. So it should be pretty similar. I've seen one very different MSR. Even the way the noto is different.
Good job on the video. Nice sequencing and all, the recap... Keep it up. It's a pleasure to learn at your side.
Thank you I plan to remake them
Thank you. I have just started Iaido, and your video has been a great help. There are so many subtle moves, which are so easy to miss when being shown. This has broken them all down nicely. Again, thank you.
I'm happy the old video is still useful, I should make more of these 🙏
Outstanding presentation! Great visuals, angles, humor, plus cool jazz music. I watched with great interest and enthusiasm and am able to relate to all that you present in this great lesson. Domo arigato gozaimashita! Respectfully, Marcus DeValentino, Okinawa Kenpo DSSI
🙏 thank you
Thank you for this, this answers so many questions for noto. I’m newer to iaido, and this will help me so much
thank you! im glad this is helpful!
Awesome tips!! Have been struggling with getting Noto to go smoothly, will definitely be incorporating these :)
im glad it is useful! you got this!
Thank you. This is what I exactly looking for. It helped me so much. 🙏
I'm glad it's helpful 🙏
Excellent video! I just love your teaching style and humor. Still feel a bit sorry for the assistant who got slayed after trying to grab your sword :p
It's a necessary sacrifice for the pursuit of knowledge 🤭
My instructor teaches from the MSR curriculum as well. I grabbed my iaito and checked a few points against the video.
oh? 😯 i suppose this video was pretty old i need to update it at some point
Alright I just found your page. Very useful for a novice like myself. Ichigyo zammai
🙏 welcome 😁
very helpful
🙏 thank you for watching
The intro 🤣 thanks for making the video!
Thanks for watching 🙏!
I enjoyed the video, im primarily interested in the different techniques between styles. I've been doing Toyama Ryu, and we have some pretty big conflicts with your technique. I'd be interested in hearing your style's reasoning. The 3 big differences i think would be the angle of the sword during noto, the grip on the tsuka and the grip on the koiguchi (sp?) In my style, during a chiburi/noto the sword blade and saya are pointed up(similar to the draw position) and the grip (while not a deathgrip) is still maintained steady(and not directly mentioned the tsuka is pointed towards the opponnent usually directly in front). The reasoning behind the two is so that while sheathing if an enemy were to attack, the tsuka is pointed directly at the enemy and the blade can be drawn and cast in a downward strike with gravity at the attacker. The goikuchi grip i dont think was ever really focused on heavily, but from personal practice i usually have my pointer finger and thumb right at the edge of the saya, we draw the blade in almost the same, using the web of the finger, but with your method i feel it would be a much higher risk of getting cut, especially using a shinken. I only use the webbing of the hand to feel the back of the blade, once the tip slides off it falls into the saya. I've seen many students guide the blade with a finger but i feel it opens them up to getting a nasty slice if they miss. Not to mention putting extra moisture on the blade and rusting it. I'd be interested to hear your take on these differences. Maybe we have differences we can learn from. Regardless, i liked the video and your technique is very smooth. Thanks for the upload.
Sorry I don't know why RUclips didn't notify me of your comments, missed it till now. Its a long one 😅 but I'll answer the noto first atleast - I haven't no definitive proof but I believe the reasoning why we noto horizontally is because it comes from the Muso Shinden Ryu koryu style - and being one of the contributors of seitei it's probably a way to teach sayabiki control
@@NamazuRyuSaiken thanks for the reply! Saiyabiki control is a big learning point in Toyama Ryu as well. After thinking on it a bit the horizontal noto has the same potential to strike in suihei as the vertical noto has to mako. Its interesting to see different styles interpretation and implementation of their arts. If you're interested I can share some videos.of.our style.privately so we can compare and discuss. Regardless keep up the great videos and promoting the art =D
A good clear video for Noto. Love the little "fight sequences" 😂 Also enjoyed the last tip. I practice Eishin ryu and for us all of these principles are the same, only we do the noto vertical as opposed to horizontal as I'm sure you're aware of. However I believe especially for Seitei that most if not all of this is applicable. Thanks for the video.
Thank you 🙏
explained very well, all clear, not easy to do. good! thnx!
Thank you 🙏
Muy buen video excelente explicaciones muchas gracias
Gracias 🙏
Another great video-GOGOGO
I have seen styles where they move the sword subtly and instead the saya moves forward to meet the tsuba, and when they get together, the whole katana moves back to the obi, to me, that one looks elegant
Would be pretty cool to see it too
굿입니다
🙏
Great video!
Thank you sir!
inspirational
🙏 thank you
Hello,thank you for this Great Video❤May i ask how tall you are?and what Katana length your using?🙏🙏
Hi thanks! I'm 168cm let me get back to you what sword I use. There is a chart for height to katana, I bought it according to that height
How i stop moving the finger at the koiguchi ?
🤔 hmm we just need to keep sheathing slowly and practice to not move the fingers, it's psychological and discipline I think
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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️.
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