Kusanku is without any doubt one of those Kata that has the most different variations. The only rival I can think of is Passai. The original Chatanyara Kusanku (which is practised in Matsubayashi Ryu and is to some now known as Kuniyoshi Kusanku), modern Chatanyara Kusanku, Chibana Kusanku, Matsumura Kusanku, Kanku Dai, Kanku Sho, Shiho Kosokun... The list goes on. According to Roland Habersetzer there are 13 versions of Kusanku.
@@avakinzerochill not 100% sure, but as far as I know Wado Ryu Kusanku is just Kanku Dai from Shotokan with some minor tweaks here and there. Just the old name for one of the youngest versions of that Kata.
In Soryu Karate we practice the Kushanku Dai and Kushanku sho from the teachings of Kanken Toyama passed down to Soryu Founder Michio Koyasu I learned from Joe Alvarado Sensei one of the First Americans who learned In Japan from Michio Koyasu Soke. I began my journey in Feb 1966 at age 14.
Uechi Ryu is originally from China and was brought to Okinawa long after Shuriteke, Nahateke, and Tomariteke were formed. The Tomarite family of styles died out, and Uechi Ryu filled that gap. That’s why it is one of the three main styles in Okinawa today. But Uechi guys would be lost in kata competitions, mainly because Uechi is brutal. I'm a Shorin Ryu guy, and I’ve trained some Uechi, and even the women were better conditioned than I was. I've done a lot more conditioning since then.
@Ronin-101 nah, that's not why. Wado isn't flashy at all. Honestly, it's probably lack of crossover. Uechi has 8 kata, and I think only like two - seisan and sanchin - are practiced in the accepted styles.
A LOT of bunkai is manufactured nonsense. It's very rare for a kata to contain information useful in a modern era, while also imparting good fundamentals.
I would disagree. Most kata, have good stuff in them. But it really depends how and when you use it and most importantly how you SEE it, since i have seen so many people take specific combinations and trying to aply them or teach them for situations where it does not make sense. Context is everything.
Learned that Kata in the thumbnail (brown belt Kata movement Shotokan) when I was 14 years old - 1994. Yes, I still practice martial arts. Student and teacher.
Thats one of those katas that would like to have more attention in competitions. It is a shame that no one remembers that kata (I'm not gonna lie, unfortunetly even I forget it exists sometimes lol)
Ive used Kishimoto No Kushanku on my recent tournaments because of its complicity and its Uniqueness and it is also similar to my favorite katas like chatanyara kushanku and Chibana no Kushanku and im not even sure if its wkf approved kata but since i saw a vid by Sandra Sanchez performing it i used it on my last tournaments
Kishimoto is approved, yes, but as mentioned in the video, the Shitoryu version is performed quite commonly, but the Gensei Ryu version is basically non-existent in Tournaments
@@cpiper6338 hard to keep up? I'd say impossible. There are more than 10 versions of Passai: Tomari Passai (said to be the oldest version), Matsumura Passai, Ishimine Passai, Chibana Passai, Itosu Passai, Passai Guwa, Bassai Sho, Bassai Dai and I can imagine there are more. Similar for Kusanku.
It has the same jumping kick and landing on all fours move as Unsu. Noone I asked knows what it does supposedly represent: fighting styles don't care about the katas, and kata people don't care about the applications.
The jump is only for athleticism. If people try to spin that the Unsu jump is a fighting move, well, ask to fight them and put them to the task of using it on you.
Impressive video. Excellent footage. Great editing. Let's call this the ground floor. I'm in!
Thank you so much! 😄
Kusanku is without any doubt one of those Kata that has the most different variations. The only rival I can think of is Passai. The original Chatanyara Kusanku (which is practised in Matsubayashi Ryu and is to some now known as Kuniyoshi Kusanku), modern Chatanyara Kusanku, Chibana Kusanku, Matsumura Kusanku, Kanku Dai, Kanku Sho, Shiho Kosokun... The list goes on. According to Roland Habersetzer there are 13 versions of Kusanku.
Which of those is the wado ryu kushanku?
@@avakinzerochill not 100% sure, but as far as I know Wado Ryu Kusanku is just Kanku Dai from Shotokan with some minor tweaks here and there. Just the old name for one of the youngest versions of that Kata.
@ralfhtg1056 yeah, it is kanku dai. I was assuming at least one of those was also
@@avakinzerochill no, that is not the case. They are all a bit different.
In Soryu Karate we practice the Kushanku Dai and Kushanku sho from the teachings of Kanken Toyama passed down to Soryu Founder Michio Koyasu I learned from Joe Alvarado Sensei one of the First Americans who learned In Japan from Michio Koyasu Soke. I began my journey in Feb 1966 at age 14.
Good video man!
I loved your editing and story telling abilitys.
Please continue
Thank you very much! 😄
Great work Oskars 🙏🏻
Thank you! 😄
Love these videos! keep em coming!
It’s too bad that Uechi Ryu is not included…
Cause it's not flashy and was created just to skill
Uechi Ryu is originally from China and was brought to Okinawa long after Shuriteke, Nahateke, and Tomariteke were formed. The Tomarite family of styles died out, and Uechi Ryu filled that gap. That’s why it is one of the three main styles in Okinawa today. But Uechi guys would be lost in kata competitions, mainly because Uechi is brutal. I'm a Shorin Ryu guy, and I’ve trained some Uechi, and even the women were better conditioned than I was. I've done a lot more conditioning since then.
@Ronin-101 nah, that's not why. Wado isn't flashy at all. Honestly, it's probably lack of crossover. Uechi has 8 kata, and I think only like two - seisan and sanchin - are practiced in the accepted styles.
Uechi Ryu wouldn't win a lot of tournaments, but it'll win a LOT of fights for one's life.
Many Teachers don't teach Bunkai. The Meaning and reasons for KATA makes it Interesting and gives you the Reason of KATA. Fighting Techniques
A LOT of bunkai is manufactured nonsense. It's very rare for a kata to contain information useful in a modern era, while also imparting good fundamentals.
@@Kamawan0 I would say ALL so called bunkai is nonsense. Unless it's obvious, like a punch or a kick. And that depends on the punch and the kick.
I would disagree. Most kata, have good stuff in them.
But it really depends how and when you use it and most importantly how you SEE it, since i have seen so many people take specific combinations and trying to aply them or teach them for situations where it does not make sense. Context is everything.
@@OskarsZvejnieks Ok, give me one example
There are videos planned on it, stay tuned 😁
Learned that Kata in the thumbnail (brown belt Kata movement Shotokan) when I was 14 years old - 1994.
Yes, I still practice martial arts.
Student and teacher.
My understanding is that the Pinans/Heians came from Ku Shanku (3 and 4), Channan (1 and 2) and Bassai (5)
Thats one of those katas that would like to have more attention in competitions. It is a shame that no one remembers that kata (I'm not gonna lie, unfortunetly even I forget it exists sometimes lol)
Keep posting.
Will try!
There are some videos in the works.
I judged many kata competitions, back in the '80s and '90s, but never got to see any of these. Too bad!
ShudoKan has a Kishimoto, Chibana and Chatan Yara version, also included recently in the WKF list.
Wonderfull...Oss!
Ive used Kishimoto No Kushanku on my recent tournaments because of its complicity and its Uniqueness and it is also similar to my favorite katas like chatanyara kushanku and Chibana no Kushanku and im not even sure if its wkf approved kata but since i saw a vid by Sandra Sanchez performing it i used it on my last tournaments
Kishimoto is approved, yes, but as mentioned in the video, the Shitoryu version is performed quite commonly, but the Gensei Ryu version is basically non-existent in Tournaments
One of those Kusanku spots, looked like O'Sensi Odo??
It does seem, with all of the style offshoots, that there are so many versions of Kusanku and Bassai that it's hard for judging officials to keep up.
@@cpiper6338 hard to keep up? I'd say impossible. There are more than 10 versions of Passai: Tomari Passai (said to be the oldest version), Matsumura Passai, Ishimine Passai, Chibana Passai, Itosu Passai, Passai Guwa, Bassai Sho, Bassai Dai and I can imagine there are more. Similar for Kusanku.
Is there a bunkai for this kata?
It has the same jumping kick and landing on all fours move as Unsu. Noone I asked knows what it does supposedly represent: fighting styles don't care about the katas, and kata people don't care about the applications.
The jump is only for athleticism. If people try to spin that the Unsu jump is a fighting move, well, ask to fight them and put them to the task of using it on you.
@@Kamawan0 that's the standard explanation. In truth it is a certain tornado kick variation
@@kaliyuddha That's even worse, those are totally useless in life or death situations.
Sure I’ll be # 151. Let’s see where this goes…
What about Channan?
Bring Heihashi Mishima in plz
💯 kata 5 Kung Fu Kuens!
2 Linear! 🥱😴