⚔Join the Online Kobudo Training with Seki Sensei⚔ Sign Up HERE (One Lesson FREE): www.patreon.com/lets_ask_sekisensei Interested in taking lessons directly from the 22nd headmaster of Kobudo Asayama Ichiden Ryu, Seki sensei? Sign up to learn authentic samurai skills with 400 years of history with perfect English interpretation from Let’s ask Shogo (ruclips.net/user/LetsaskShogoYourJapanesefriendinKyoto). ❶ No previous martial arts experience is required; you can catch up anytime ❷ Every lesson will be RECORDED and will be available to rewatch anytime ❸ You can ask Seki Sensei questions about the techniques and samurai culture/history ❹ You can join even if you belong to another Ryuha style ❺ You can receive OFFICIAL DAN RANKS by taking exams online (and opening a DOJO in the future) 🛍Purchase the Equipment You Need for Training: tozandoshop.com/letsaskshogo🛍 🗡Iaitō (training katana): tozandoshop.com/collections/habahiro-heavy-weight-iaito/products/byakko-tenryu-semi-custom-iaito?variant=34479502164101 *🗡Bokutō (wooden katana) with plastic Saya (scabbard): tozandoshop.com/collections/iaido-bokuto/products/the-nyumon-iaido-beginners-set 🥋Dōgi and Hakama: tozandoshop.com/collections/kendo-uniform-sets/products/basic-synthetic-kendo-uniform-set-1?variant=39417538216069 🥋Inner Obi (any color): tozandoshop.com/collections/iaido-obi/products/cotton-kaku-obi?variant=34282096230533 🥋Outer Obi (must be WHITE): tozandoshop.com/collections/aikido-obi/products/white-aikido-obi?variant=34120442413189 🦯Short Jō staff: tozandoshop.com/collections/polearms/products/4-21-shaku-jo?variant=39604823195781 🦯Long Jō staff: tozandoshop.com/collections/polearms/products/5-shaku-bo?variant=34073586106501 🧐Frequently Asked Questions About Our Online Lessons: Q❓: I have no experience with katana. Will I still be able to catch up? A💡: You don’t need any previous katana martial arts experience to participate in our lessons. Seki Sensei, the instructor of the online lessons, will carefully give you instructions on how to handle the katana regardless of your level. You will also be able to access all the videos of the past lessons, so you can watch what every other student has learned in the past. You can also send us videos of your progress, and Seki Sensei will be happy to give you feedback. Q❓: What is the right length of the Iaito (zinc alloy training katana) I should use? A💡: Please purchase an Iaitō that is at least two blocks longer than the standard length. The standard length for Seki Sensei is about 177cm, so he should use a 2.45 Shaku long katana. However, he uses a 2.6 Shaku-long katana that is supposed to be used by someone 190cm tall. If the katana is too short, it becomes too easy to draw, which is not good for training. Q❓: Can I join even if I belong to a different Ryuha style? A💡: Yes, it’s not a problem at all. The Seki Sensei himself has trained in more than five styles and various other weapons. If you don’t want others to know that you are participating, you can join the online lessons with your camera off. To have the Sensei check your progress, you can send us a video of you practicing. 🗡Join the Online Iaido Training with Seki Sensei🗡 Sign Up Here (One Lesson FREE): www.patreon.com/sekisenseiiaidotraining Interested in taking Iaido lessons directly from the 8th Dan Iaido Master with 40 years of experience in Musō Shinden Ryu, Seki sensei? Sign up to learn authentic samurai skills with perfect English interpretation from Let’s ask Shogo. ❶ No previous martial arts experience is required; you can catch up anytime ❷ Every lesson will be RECORDED and will be available to rewatch anytime ❸ You can ask Seki Sensei questions about the techniques and samurai culture/history ❹ You can join even if you belong to another Ryuha style 💻Seki Sensei's Official Website💻 sekisensei.com/ 🎵Original Opening Theme Song "Hyakuren"🎵 Performance: Hanafugetsu (Singer/Suzuhana Yuko, Shakuhachi/Kaminaga Daisuke, Koto/Ibukuro Kiyoshi) Compositions & Arrangements: Suzuhana Yuko Mixing & Mastering: Watabiki Yuta ❓What is Asayama Ichiden Ryu? / Who is Seki sensei?❓ ruclips.net/video/2aBKmWmJpJw/видео.html 📱Instagram📱 instagram.com/lets_ask_sekisensei/ *Please ask us questions through the DM here ♪Music♪ elements.envato.com/audio otowabi.com/category/material/japan #katana #iaido #kenjutsu #kobudo #asayamaichidenryu
It's fascinating to watch this as a HEMA practitioner, and to observe the strange convergences and divergences in a completely unrelated sword art. For example, the kata demonstrated at 4:27, a descending cut from a rear-weighted shoulder stance displacing an opponent from the center-line, is extremely common in European longsword, being both one of the five master cuts in the German kunst des fechtens (Zornhau) and the first sword-in-two hands play in the Italian l'arte d'armizare. It's very strange for me to think of it as an obscure play, but that only goes to demonstrate the true breadth of historical swordsmanship. Thank you and thank Seki Sensei for sharing with such a well-crafted video!
The way he's able to move so smoothly... While at the same time the blade travel so quickly is just incredible😮 holy heck dude. 😅 I would have just dropped my blade and run away. Amazing video thank you for sharing.
I love the way grandmaster teaches us technique and traditional. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge with all of us we appreciate that. We are grateful❤
While I sadly never found a school for learning any style with the Katana near where I live after several years of searching I found a HEMA club and been doing that for some years now, also visiting other schools throughout the country to learn basic of different styles. It was very interesting to see this video from that point of view, as we have stances extremely similar to Kata-dai and Uki-bune where the first one is basically our "standard to-go stance" and the second one one of the more regularly used ones, while another school I visited basically focused primarily on fencing from the second one. I always find it extremely fascinating how similar different martial arts develop due to human body mechanics but then wildly differ due to cultural differences or individual preferences of style founders.
I’d love to train with Seki Sensei for a few years. He’s such a humble person and his kobudo is and kenjutsu is just 100% real and battlefield realistic.
1:12 that one shows up in the anime/maga Shigurui (extreme content warning in case you want to Google) under the name Nagareboshi. I always kinda assumed it was made up.
i just love these videos even when i am not trying the techniques i just love watching them because of everyones approach and positive attitude. This channel is definitely one of the many reasons im going to train in Japan. Thank you for the videos and please keep teaching us through them.
I just want to say thank you so much to Seki Sensei for sharing his incredible knowledge and acumen with the world. My love for Budo finally feels feed thanks to this amazing channel.
It's been said that the best defense is distance; in general, to not be where the enemy's weapon is. I see that to be a fundamental of Seki sensei's teaching.
Congratulations, for unique insight into the tactical role of postures, their changes, involving angular, even circular motions. Best regards. Paul, 68, a retired karateka and fan of both European fencing and Kendo of the East.
It's so interesting learning the full context of these stances! I must admit, though I am knowledgeable on a lot of these, I was never taught the full context or history of them. Thank you for this lesson.
Awesome video, thank you! Continuing a comment I left on an earlier video: I started to get good drawing my five shaku katana sword, and decided to show my family. I took an extra step back just to be safe, and my television was the casualty😂 Spacial awareness is important 😁
We're lucky to have him as an instructor. I began training in the Japanese style of Wado Ryu Karate as a boy until earning my black belt. I left that style to train in MMA as it was just beginning to emerge. Over the years I have trained with so many different instructors. However I can only think of 3 instructors from my past that have radiated such a powerful yet peaceful influence to begin as a their student. Now I have found a 4th. I have always had a deep craving to learn the way of the Sword, I could just never find a teacher. Now I can't stop practicing what I'm watching.
His "ashi sabaki" techniques are great...of course...he IS a master of his art after all. Footwork is a great way to control distance in a fight and the person that controls distance, sets the pace for the fight. Another way that my sensei taught us was also using our arms. Similar to the "floating boat", our normal "default" stance was with our arms slightly bent but out in front of us at eye level to our opponent. Just THAT ALONE, sticking your empty hands out toward someone's face, will make them step back. I've done it many times working security years ago. PLUS, with a nearly 3 shaku sword out in front of you like that, they have to charge in TOWARD the "business end" of a deadly blade JUST to get started...not something done lightly or easily.
I study Toyama-ryu battojutsu, and while I do greatly enjoy practicing it, the few stances that ryu-ha uses feel very rigid. I love seeing this more interesting and unique stances and I hope to practice them in some form someday.
Greetings from a Shodan in Bujinkan Budo. In one of our ryuha called Togakure Ninpo we have a similar kamae like the one from Muso Shinden Jushin Ryu. We call it Ichi no Kamae, because it looks like how you write number one in japanese 🙂. However, we are also familiar with Asayama Kobudo, and its Taijutsu forms - hand to hand combat. Is it possible for us, your followers, for Sensei to demonstrate some of his Taijutsu skills? Thank you so much for this opportunity and looking forward for more and more excitement of this beautiful tradition. Good luck with your channel ❤
Wonderful video. I practice naginata and can see a lot of similarities despite the differences in the weapons. We also move from hanmi to hanmi and have a variety of kamae, where we consider the effect that the point of the weapon will have on the opponent's decisions.
It was fun to see Tsukada-san (I hope I spelled his name right; my Japanese isn't very good) performing a kata this time! You can tell he's quite capable too. Would love to see more of his prowess too!
"Final Kamaya" is what Geralt did in Polish TV series "Witcher". Also he has catana instead of steel sword, but in the book it got described as "strange witcher blade, razor sharp", so imho it fits there.
Nami-wake bears a strong resemblance in both position and use to a guard position used with the rapier in Fabris' tradition. It's always nice to see parallels even with vastly different weapons.
The first time I saw that Uki-bune stance is when I was watching an episode in the anime Rurouni Kenshin (a.k.a. Samurai X) where Kenshin was fighting Hanya (The Oni mask wearing ninja henchmen with stripped sleeves).
Love ❤️ your channel The lessons are awesome and that your passing a traditional art form down in a way is Kool. Continuing the knowledge is important, thankQ I've studied a northern style of kung fu for a long time, and tradition, teaching, learning, and passing it down was part of the curriculum. The preservation of the art to those open to it.
some of those stances look very much like germanic longsword stances, namely the shoulder stance, which looks like Von Tag, "from the roof" (the first stance beginners learn), the floating boat is called "longpoint", the katana behind the head made me think of the "wrath" stance except they don't have the same point at all. The most basic stance being one you guys know as one specialised for armour combat is very interesting, because it might point at the idea that european medieval longsword fencing tradition started out as armoured combat first (which makes sense, because in europe two handed swords only really started to spread when armour got protective enough to allow not using a shield)
In German ( Liechtenauer) longsword putting the sword on your shoulder like that is a common guard and is called vom tag. The way he moves to that position and out of it wouldn't be out of place in a longsword sparring match.
Vom tag seems to have quite a lot of variationsm, but usually it seems to hold the sword above the head, like in what's called "jodan no kamae" in kenjutsu. Never seen a vom tag variation that actually puts the sword on the shoulder like that.
An interesting stance is where you stand partly sideways, with your sword pointed behind you at a low guard and your torso forward, with your legs in a power stance, as if you are about to swing the sword from underneath. But instead, when your opponent goes for an attack to your exposed torso, as they move forward, you move backwards as you bring the your sword over them as they close in and it catches them off guard, because they assured,,from your stance, that you were going for a low blow, and so they wind up stepping in too soon and leaving themselves open for a power attack from you.
There are a copule of longsword guards that look similar to this. Guard of the Lady and High Guard of the Lady looks like the defense look like the defense in 4:11. They are used to swipe aside a cut while simulatenous making a thrust to the enemy's throat by using his forward momentum against him.
That is very interesting. Definitely see some applications that are unique to the katana and very informative. The last one, "Floating Boat", does remind me of the "Long Pointe" stance seen in longsword. I wonder if the applications for that stance are similar. Specifically, is it also used as a way to create space or discourage the opponent from closing?
I've been practicing Silat and Escrima since 1993 and Taiji, Bagua and Xingyi since 2008. I like practicing slow twisting and circling steps with blades. It nourishes my brain and I circulate my chi to stay healthy and massage my internal organs to stay soft and limber. The first thing I would teach someone is how to relax and root and circulate Qi. After relaxing,, someone can learn basic Gong Fu!
Im trying to train too, but heres one question that i really wanna ask. Can you do a video where Seki sensei demonstrate how to fight against a spear ?
I'd love to see a practioner of this particular style spar with someone who had long sword HEMA training, perhaps of the German or Italian discipline. Too often I see Kendoka spar with HEMA practioners, which isn't bad but it does not really translate the ACTUAL combat samurai would have done.
For the upperstance I don't have a ō-yoroi but I do have a europeen plate harnes which has the same restricitions for the shoulder and it makes a lot of sense to hold it like that. It's bit like the wraith guerd in europeen sword fighting where you rest the blade on your shoulder. For the last one what is keeping people from relising what your doing fainting a snap attack at you only to go in a upper stance to deflect your sword away to then cut your hand off? Or even simpler move in with your point up to then tape his sword away with your flat while he try's to move it only to come down with a cut of your own. Seems a little easy to read since you don't give your self many options, that's why I already knew what was going to happen when you took that stance, before you did anything.
Quite interesting that something close to Ushiro-jodan shows up in one of the Gumbup in Haidong Gumdo (Korean sword). Haidong Gumdo is a more modern martial art which borrowed a lot from Japanese styles, so I would love to know the deeper history behind the kata that Seki-sensei demonstrated. Also, please forgive me, but I will be stealing Uki-hune for my school to show the students how stances like that and Ichi no Kamae can truly be useful!
The Uki-bune stance kinda looks like the "Shinken no Kamae" stance seen in Rurouni Kenshin anime (the new one) where Kenshin uses it against Hanya to measure his striped arms.
What is the song or music that starts at roughly 5:18? It's awesome! I'm not sure how to look up this type of music I like it but I'm sure it has a specific name.
You could probably learn all these techniques in a week. But having the mind to perform these techniques correctly in a match is hard, and that’s where years of practice comes in.
I've seen some other weird stabs in depictions of other martial arts. The more useful one was parrying with the sheath and stabbing the opponent from behind your back. The weirdest one though was putting your own sword between your legs. Whoever came up with it must have been a medieval troll... (it seems plausible enough in the depiction as he had already control over the opponents weapon hand and the opponent wouldn't be able to reach the weapon hand)
Great observation. Stone stance is more modelled after hasso-no-kamae, where the weapon is held near the shoulder. This is a relatively well-known stance. What made Seki-Sensei's stance unusual is that the weapon was resting ON his shoulder.
⚔Join the Online Kobudo Training with Seki Sensei⚔
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Interested in taking lessons directly from the 22nd headmaster of Kobudo Asayama Ichiden Ryu, Seki sensei? Sign up to learn authentic samurai skills with 400 years of history with perfect English interpretation from Let’s ask Shogo (ruclips.net/user/LetsaskShogoYourJapanesefriendinKyoto).
❶ No previous martial arts experience is required; you can catch up anytime
❷ Every lesson will be RECORDED and will be available to rewatch anytime
❸ You can ask Seki Sensei questions about the techniques and samurai culture/history
❹ You can join even if you belong to another Ryuha style
❺ You can receive OFFICIAL DAN RANKS by taking exams online (and opening a DOJO in the future)
🛍Purchase the Equipment You Need for Training: tozandoshop.com/letsaskshogo🛍
🗡Iaitō (training katana): tozandoshop.com/collections/habahiro-heavy-weight-iaito/products/byakko-tenryu-semi-custom-iaito?variant=34479502164101
*🗡Bokutō (wooden katana) with plastic Saya (scabbard): tozandoshop.com/collections/iaido-bokuto/products/the-nyumon-iaido-beginners-set
🥋Dōgi and Hakama: tozandoshop.com/collections/kendo-uniform-sets/products/basic-synthetic-kendo-uniform-set-1?variant=39417538216069
🥋Inner Obi (any color): tozandoshop.com/collections/iaido-obi/products/cotton-kaku-obi?variant=34282096230533
🥋Outer Obi (must be WHITE): tozandoshop.com/collections/aikido-obi/products/white-aikido-obi?variant=34120442413189
🦯Short Jō staff: tozandoshop.com/collections/polearms/products/4-21-shaku-jo?variant=39604823195781
🦯Long Jō staff: tozandoshop.com/collections/polearms/products/5-shaku-bo?variant=34073586106501
🧐Frequently Asked Questions About Our Online Lessons:
Q❓: I have no experience with katana. Will I still be able to catch up?
A💡: You don’t need any previous katana martial arts experience to participate in our lessons.
Seki Sensei, the instructor of the online lessons, will carefully give you instructions on how to handle the katana regardless of your level. You will also be able to access all the videos of the past lessons, so you can watch what every other student has learned in the past. You can also send us videos of your progress, and Seki Sensei will be happy to give you feedback.
Q❓: What is the right length of the Iaito (zinc alloy training katana) I should use?
A💡: Please purchase an Iaitō that is at least two blocks longer than the standard length.
The standard length for Seki Sensei is about 177cm, so he should use a 2.45 Shaku long katana. However, he uses a 2.6 Shaku-long katana that is supposed to be used by someone 190cm tall. If the katana is too short, it becomes too easy to draw, which is not good for training.
Q❓: Can I join even if I belong to a different Ryuha style?
A💡: Yes, it’s not a problem at all.
The Seki Sensei himself has trained in more than five styles and various other weapons. If you don’t want others to know that you are participating, you can join the online lessons with your camera off. To have the Sensei check your progress, you can send us a video of you practicing.
🗡Join the Online Iaido Training with Seki Sensei🗡
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Interested in taking Iaido lessons directly from the 8th Dan Iaido Master with 40 years of experience in Musō Shinden Ryu, Seki sensei? Sign up to learn authentic samurai skills with perfect English interpretation from Let’s ask Shogo.
❶ No previous martial arts experience is required; you can catch up anytime
❷ Every lesson will be RECORDED and will be available to rewatch anytime
❸ You can ask Seki Sensei questions about the techniques and samurai culture/history
❹ You can join even if you belong to another Ryuha style
💻Seki Sensei's Official Website💻
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🎵Original Opening Theme Song "Hyakuren"🎵
Performance: Hanafugetsu (Singer/Suzuhana Yuko, Shakuhachi/Kaminaga Daisuke, Koto/Ibukuro Kiyoshi)
Compositions & Arrangements: Suzuhana Yuko
Mixing & Mastering: Watabiki Yuta
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#katana #iaido #kenjutsu #kobudo #asayamaichidenryu
It's fascinating to watch this as a HEMA practitioner, and to observe the strange convergences and divergences in a completely unrelated sword art. For example, the kata demonstrated at 4:27, a descending cut from a rear-weighted shoulder stance displacing an opponent from the center-line, is extremely common in European longsword, being both one of the five master cuts in the German kunst des fechtens (Zornhau) and the first sword-in-two hands play in the Italian l'arte d'armizare. It's very strange for me to think of it as an obscure play, but that only goes to demonstrate the true breadth of historical swordsmanship. Thank you and thank Seki Sensei for sharing with such a well-crafted video!
Wherever the country on earth, the human biomechanics remain the same.
@@zaberfangBlack or white, we all just some nerves and bones fr 🗣🔥
The way he pivots so easily is very impressive you can tell he's dedicated a big portion of his life to this study
Sensei does the kamae as a natural part of his life like walking , very impressive .!👏
Amazing how subtle these movements are, I can only imagine how much depth there is below the surface of shar is plainly visible in these techniques.
Fantastic. I feel Seki Sensei is giving us a true glimpse of what the samurai of old practice. Unlike the Budo practice nowadays.
1:45 That kamae looks similar to one that I watched in the anime "Shigurui"
The Kogan-Ryu style, Lol I literally said “Nagareboshi!” 😂
The way he's able to move so smoothly... While at the same time the blade travel so quickly is just incredible😮 holy heck dude. 😅 I would have just dropped my blade and run away.
Amazing video thank you for sharing.
後半の二本は初めて拝見させて頂きました。
浅山一傳流ホームページで型が二百数十本と書いてありましたが、これまで見せて頂いた型はまだまだ一部でしかない事に改めて驚きです。
とても勉強になります、ありがとうございました。
1:45
“Nami-wake” known better in Kakegawa and the Noubi area as…“Nagare-boshi”
I love the way grandmaster teaches us technique and traditional. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge with all of us we appreciate that. We are grateful❤
1:30 Seki sensei trained with Iwamoto Kogan 👍
My first thought when I saw the thumbnail as well.
was checking for this comment
While I sadly never found a school for learning any style with the Katana near where I live after several years of searching I found a HEMA club and been doing that for some years now, also visiting other schools throughout the country to learn basic of different styles. It was very interesting to see this video from that point of view, as we have stances extremely similar to Kata-dai and Uki-bune where the first one is basically our "standard to-go stance" and the second one one of the more regularly used ones, while another school I visited basically focused primarily on fencing from the second one. I always find it extremely fascinating how similar different martial arts develop due to human body mechanics but then wildly differ due to cultural differences or individual preferences of style founders.
I’d love to train with Seki Sensei for a few years. He’s such a humble person and his kobudo is and kenjutsu is just 100% real and battlefield realistic.
1:12 that one shows up in the anime/maga Shigurui (extreme content warning in case you want to Google) under the name Nagareboshi. I always kinda assumed it was made up.
Simply beautiful . Airigato Master Seki for sharing your knowledge with the world. Thank you Shogo for English translation.
Thank you so much! Once again, Seki Sensei showed amazing techniques with rare Kamae. Truly educational! I love your work and channel!❤
One thing I have learned about traditional Japanese arts is if it's there, it's there for a reason. The attention to detail is incredible.
alot of people tend to over look that
i just love these videos even when i am not trying the techniques i just love watching them because of everyones approach and positive attitude. This channel is definitely one of the many reasons im going to train in Japan. Thank you for the videos and please keep teaching us through them.
This is fantastic feel like I'm watching long forgotten fighting styles and tricks employed so long ago thanks for sharing this.
that logic with luring an specific attack with each stance is something i figured out alone, glad to know even formal martial arts use that logic too!
I just want to say thank you so much to Seki Sensei for sharing his incredible knowledge and acumen with the world. My love for Budo finally feels feed thanks to this amazing channel.
It's been said that the best defense is distance; in general, to not be where the enemy's weapon is. I see that to be a fundamental of Seki sensei's teaching.
Congratulations, for unique insight into the tactical role of postures, their changes, involving angular, even circular motions. Best regards. Paul, 68, a retired karateka and fan of both European fencing and Kendo of the East.
It's so interesting learning the full context of these stances! I must admit, though I am knowledgeable on a lot of these, I was never taught the full context or history of them. Thank you for this lesson.
Absolutely fantastic, the best Kenjutsu I have ever seen.
Thank you all.
Brilliant 👍 Take care. Stay safe 🙏
John and Kate
As a rapier enthusiast and Katana enthusiast.
Thank you for you input Sensei
Awesome video, thank you! Continuing a comment I left on an earlier video: I started to get good drawing my five shaku katana sword, and decided to show my family. I took an extra step back just to be safe, and my television was the casualty😂 Spacial awareness is important 😁
It takes a passion and love for the sword to study this much and so many styles and techniques truly a skilled man
This dude is solid! My years with Hatsumi Sensei told me that 😊😊
The second stance was phenomenal
Seki Sensei is so cool! Everything's really easy to understand.
We're lucky to have him as an instructor. I began training in the Japanese style of Wado Ryu Karate as a boy until earning my black belt. I left that style to train in MMA as it was just beginning to emerge. Over the years I have trained with so many different instructors. However I can only think of 3 instructors from my past that have radiated such a powerful yet peaceful influence to begin as a their student. Now I have found a 4th. I have always had a deep craving to learn the way of the Sword, I could just never find a teacher. Now I can't stop practicing what I'm watching.
Nami-wake reminded me of something i saw while reading the manga Gamaran, holding the blade until the opponent makes a move
His "ashi sabaki" techniques are great...of course...he IS a master of his art after all. Footwork is a great way to control distance in a fight and the person that controls distance, sets the pace for the fight. Another way that my sensei taught us was also using our arms. Similar to the "floating boat", our normal "default" stance was with our arms slightly bent but out in front of us at eye level to our opponent. Just THAT ALONE, sticking your empty hands out toward someone's face, will make them step back. I've done it many times working security years ago. PLUS, with a nearly 3 shaku sword out in front of you like that, they have to charge in TOWARD the "business end" of a deadly blade JUST to get started...not something done lightly or easily.
Another thing about a blade pointed at your face is that it almost disappears from your field of vision.
Good move & stance Seki Sensei 👍🏻
When I used to train in Toyama Ryu Battojutsu we had a kamae very similar to Uki-bune but it was called seigan. Really love your videos!
I study Toyama-ryu battojutsu, and while I do greatly enjoy practicing it, the few stances that ryu-ha uses feel very rigid. I love seeing this more interesting and unique stances and I hope to practice them in some form someday.
Excellent video by a great master.
Greetings from a Shodan in Bujinkan Budo. In one of our ryuha called Togakure Ninpo we have a similar kamae like the one from Muso Shinden Jushin Ryu. We call it Ichi no Kamae, because it looks like how you write number one in japanese 🙂. However, we are also familiar with Asayama Kobudo, and its Taijutsu forms - hand to hand combat. Is it possible for us, your followers, for Sensei to demonstrate some of his Taijutsu skills? Thank you so much for this opportunity and looking forward for more and more excitement of this beautiful tradition. Good luck with your channel ❤
Wonderful video. I practice naginata and can see a lot of similarities despite the differences in the weapons. We also move from hanmi to hanmi and have a variety of kamae, where we consider the effect that the point of the weapon will have on the opponent's decisions.
It was fun to see Tsukada-san (I hope I spelled his name right; my Japanese isn't very good) performing a kata this time! You can tell he's quite capable too. Would love to see more of his prowess too!
Tsukada-san is a Shihan-said of Asayama Ichiden Ryu, meaning he can be the instructor if Seki sensei is not present!
I was going to comment this as well! I got excited when I saw Tsukada-san got to be the lead.
Keep him in videos coming
7:18 OMG! I saw a similar kamae in Rurouni Kenshin old series.
Now we know where some Manga/Anime with uncommon katana stances and techniques got their inspirations! 😊
I remember the last stance from Kenshin anime. So cool!
Very interesting. I would like to see the explanations for the more common kamae.
"Final Kamaya" is what Geralt did in Polish TV series "Witcher". Also he has catana instead of steel sword, but in the book it got described as "strange witcher blade, razor sharp", so imho it fits there.
Nami-wake bears a strong resemblance in both position and use to a guard position used with the rapier in Fabris' tradition.
It's always nice to see parallels even with vastly different weapons.
The first time I saw that Uki-bune stance is when I was watching an episode in the anime Rurouni Kenshin (a.k.a. Samurai X) where Kenshin was fighting Hanya (The Oni mask wearing ninja henchmen with stripped sleeves).
Just by looking at his face you could tell that sensei is passionate about his practice.
It all looks so amazing!! Thank you!❤
Thank You both very much ! This is really unique content 🙂
Love ❤️ your channel The lessons are awesome and that your passing a traditional art form down in a way is Kool. Continuing the knowledge is important, thankQ
I've studied a northern style of kung fu for a long time, and tradition, teaching, learning, and passing it down was part of the curriculum. The preservation of the art to those open to it.
Thank you for the lesson!
These videos are really great. Thank you and sensei.
Thank you for sharing! Amazing content and episode.
Amazing. Thank you very much for the video
That last kamae would be great for measuring Hanya's arm
Love the parallels with European longsword arts
Thank you very much, for your job on this chanel!
I love Japan's culture and theyr people..and i was fascinated by theyr culture..and samurai! God Bless Them!
some of those stances look very much like germanic longsword stances, namely the shoulder stance, which looks like Von Tag, "from the roof" (the first stance beginners learn), the floating boat is called "longpoint", the katana behind the head made me think of the "wrath" stance except they don't have the same point at all. The most basic stance being one you guys know as one specialised for armour combat is very interesting, because it might point at the idea that european medieval longsword fencing tradition started out as armoured combat first (which makes sense, because in europe two handed swords only really started to spread when armour got protective enough to allow not using a shield)
In German ( Liechtenauer) longsword putting the sword on your shoulder like that is a common guard and is called vom tag. The way he moves to that position and out of it wouldn't be out of place in a longsword sparring match.
Vom tag seems to have quite a lot of variationsm, but usually it seems to hold the sword above the head, like in what's called "jodan no kamae" in kenjutsu. Never seen a vom tag variation that actually puts the sword on the shoulder like that.
An interesting stance is where you stand partly sideways, with your sword pointed behind you at a low guard and your torso forward, with your legs in a power stance, as if you are about to swing the sword from underneath. But instead, when your opponent goes for an attack to your exposed torso, as they move forward, you move backwards as you bring the your sword over them as they close in and it catches them off guard, because they assured,,from your stance, that you were going for a low blow, and so they wind up stepping in too soon and leaving themselves open for a power attack from you.
There are a copule of longsword guards that look similar to this. Guard of the Lady and High Guard of the Lady looks like the defense look like the defense in 4:11. They are used to swipe aside a cut while simulatenous making a thrust to the enemy's throat by using his forward momentum against him.
There's an european equivalent to the floating boat stance I think. Long point it is called in longsword fencing if I remember correctly
That is very interesting. Definitely see some applications that are unique to the katana and very informative. The last one, "Floating Boat", does remind me of the "Long Pointe" stance seen in longsword. I wonder if the applications for that stance are similar. Specifically, is it also used as a way to create space or discourage the opponent from closing?
I've been practicing Silat and Escrima since 1993 and Taiji, Bagua and Xingyi since 2008. I like practicing slow twisting and circling steps with blades. It nourishes my brain and I circulate my chi to stay healthy and massage my internal organs to stay soft and limber.
The first thing I would teach someone is how to relax and root and circulate Qi. After relaxing,, someone can learn basic Gong Fu!
1st is like nagare Boshi from shigurui
cool stances!
Excellent!
Im trying to train too, but heres one question that i really wanna ask. Can you do a video where Seki sensei demonstrate how to fight against a spear ?
Arigato Seki sensei
Thank you!
I'd love to see a practioner of this particular style spar with someone who had long sword HEMA training, perhaps of the German or Italian discipline.
Too often I see Kendoka spar with HEMA practioners, which isn't bad but it does not really translate the ACTUAL combat samurai would have done.
Man, I love kobudo, It's a shame it isn't as popular as iaito or kendo. I think my favourite stance so far is the Han-Getsu (half moon) stance.
The last kata also appears in kukishin ryu which I study called ichi no kamae
That blade finger grip reminded me of Shigurui Death Frenzy
Thank you
For the upperstance I don't have a ō-yoroi but I do have a europeen plate harnes which has the same restricitions for the shoulder and it makes a lot of sense to hold it like that. It's bit like the wraith guerd in europeen sword fighting where you rest the blade on your shoulder. For the last one what is keeping people from relising what your doing fainting a snap attack at you only to go in a upper stance to deflect your sword away to then cut your hand off? Or even simpler move in with your point up to then tape his sword away with your flat while he try's to move it only to come down with a cut of your own. Seems a little easy to read since you don't give your self many options, that's why I already knew what was going to happen when you took that stance, before you did anything.
the last stance will help with any self defense melee weapon..
After watchin a lot of these Seki Sensei videos, i wonder how it would go if he, with his techniques, met someone who practices HEMA.
Quite interesting that something close to Ushiro-jodan shows up in one of the Gumbup in Haidong Gumdo (Korean sword). Haidong Gumdo is a more modern martial art which borrowed a lot from Japanese styles, so I would love to know the deeper history behind the kata that Seki-sensei demonstrated. Also, please forgive me, but I will be stealing Uki-hune for my school to show the students how stances like that and Ichi no Kamae can truly be useful!
The Uki-bune stance kinda looks like the "Shinken no Kamae" stance seen in Rurouni Kenshin anime (the new one) where Kenshin uses it against Hanya to measure his striped arms.
What is the song or music that starts at roughly 5:18? It's awesome! I'm not sure how to look up this type of music I like it but I'm sure it has a specific name.
5:49
-"source?"
-"I made it up"
I mean.. if it works, it works.
He didn’t say he “made it up”, but rather that it is a technique that is described in the system but doesn’t have a baked in kata
This sensei moves like he actually may have time travelled from the past
It blows my mind how aware of the blade they are! Are the blades sharp?
Uke-Bune or similar was seen in the manga Rurouni Kenshin.
1:20 Kogan ryu, Nagare Boshi
about the first technique shown, there is an entire manga based on it called Shigurui
You could probably learn all these techniques in a week. But having the mind to perform these techniques correctly in a match is hard, and that’s where years of practice comes in.
Thanks!
Nami-wake kamae maybe become inspiration for "Kogan ryu Nagare-boshi" in manga Shigurui
Very cool
I've seen some other weird stabs in depictions of other martial arts. The more useful one was parrying with the sheath and stabbing the opponent from behind your back.
The weirdest one though was putting your own sword between your legs. Whoever came up with it must have been a medieval troll... (it seems plausible enough in the depiction as he had already control over the opponents weapon hand and the opponent wouldn't be able to reach the weapon hand)
Isn't the shoulder stand stance the stone stance from ghost of tsushima?
Great observation.
Stone stance is more modelled after hasso-no-kamae, where the weapon is held near the shoulder. This is a relatively well-known stance.
What made Seki-Sensei's stance unusual is that the weapon was resting ON his shoulder.
So the Master Yi stance
刀を正面横 水平に構えるのは、二階堂流の一文字と言うのを聞いた事がありますが、似た技なのでしょうか?
又浮舟は初めて見ました。
新陰流での技の浮舟と名前が同じだけでしょうか?
何で読んだか忘れましたが、同じ様に手を伸ばす構えが正木一刀流にあり大一文字と言うと?