Looks like an eccentric form of Chen style. You can always tell someone thats mastered it because they wait for the energy to move first. well executed, thanks for sharing.
Zhaobao is a neighbouring town to Chenjiagou, and the style looks quite to Small frame Chen style. Whether it came from Chenjiagou or from Zhaobao is a point of contention.
@@youlihan thank you. If I may ask, is zhaobao taiji part of xuan wu pai training program or extra training material? and are there any differences between zhaobao and wudang taiji? just that they look quite similar to my untrained eye. always a joy to watch your videos!
@@perryrichter9619 Perry, when I was practicing at Mt. Wudang and Southern Wudang (Ying Shan) between 2001-2005 under GM You Xuan De, 4 disciples (of the 15th Generation) were practicing Zhaobao Taijiquan. (Tang Li Long, You Xiao Long, You Chang Long, and You Fei Long). When I asked my older Brother and Teacher, Tang Li Long, where this Form came from, he replied from GM Liu Rui. Liu Rui is the 11th Generation Lineage Holder of the Zhaobao Taiji System. The Generation Tree, as Liu Rui quotes goes back to the known Taoist Wudang Master Wang Zong Yue: Wángzōngyuè (15th Century) - jiǎng fǎ - xíngxǐhuái - zhāngchǔ chén - chénjìngbó - zhāngzōngyǔ - zhāng yàn - chénqīngpíng - tā zhāo yuǎn - hé qìng xǐ - zhèngwùqīng - liú ruì - yóuxuándé - tánglǐlóng - Ismet Himmet 王宗岳(15th Century) - 蒋法 - 邢喜怀 - 张楚臣 - 陈敬伯 - 张宗禹 - 张彦 - 陈清萍 - 他招远 - 和庆喜 - 郑悟清 - 刘瑞 - 游玄德 - 唐理龙 - Ismet Himmet. In terms of the flavor, what I have seen from our Xuan Wu Pai Practitioners compared to other places, the style is pretty much more 'simple' at Mt Wudang (like a simple 'walk-through') and does not emphasize too much on small circles. It's more of a large frame. Apart from this, between 2000-2001, when I was studying in Northeast China, an old Taijiquan Teacher of my 1st Wudang Shifu was also teaching Zhaobao, and his flavor was also far different. It was a very LOW FRAME practice (Xia Pan). What I teach today is mostly Zhong Pan (the middle frame); from time to time, I also like the high frame with very small movements.
Beautiful movements 👌
Wow, that's a very fine form.
Very good! Excellent channel! greetings from Argentina🐉🐉☀️🌜
Amazing❤
Very nice 👌
Fenomenal
Looks like an eccentric form of Chen style. You can always tell someone thats mastered it because they wait for the energy to move first. well executed, thanks for sharing.
Zhaobao is a neighbouring town to Chenjiagou, and the style looks quite to Small frame Chen style. Whether it came from Chenjiagou or from Zhaobao is a point of contention.
...goose bumps all over...😆😉🤙🏻🙏🏻
I love the sweep at 9:55!
Hahaha...you muppet
🙏💜
💎✨💠
☯☯☯☯☯☯
excellent!! Did you learn this in wudang?
I learned this in Germany from my Wudang Teacher Tang Li Long.
@@youlihan thank you. If I may ask, is zhaobao taiji part of xuan wu pai training program or extra training material? and are there any differences between zhaobao and wudang taiji? just that they look quite similar to my untrained eye. always a joy to watch your videos!
@@perryrichter9619 Perry, when I was practicing at Mt. Wudang and Southern Wudang (Ying Shan) between 2001-2005 under GM You Xuan De, 4 disciples (of the 15th Generation) were practicing Zhaobao Taijiquan. (Tang Li Long, You Xiao Long, You Chang Long, and You Fei Long). When I asked my older Brother and Teacher, Tang Li Long, where this Form came from, he replied from GM Liu Rui. Liu Rui is the 11th Generation Lineage Holder of the Zhaobao Taiji System.
The Generation Tree, as Liu Rui quotes goes back to the known Taoist Wudang Master Wang Zong Yue:
Wángzōngyuè (15th Century) - jiǎng fǎ - xíngxǐhuái - zhāngchǔ chén - chénjìngbó - zhāngzōngyǔ - zhāng yàn - chénqīngpíng - tā zhāo yuǎn - hé qìng xǐ - zhèngwùqīng - liú ruì - yóuxuándé - tánglǐlóng - Ismet Himmet
王宗岳(15th Century) - 蒋法 - 邢喜怀 - 张楚臣 - 陈敬伯 - 张宗禹 - 张彦 - 陈清萍 - 他招远 - 和庆喜 - 郑悟清 - 刘瑞 - 游玄德 - 唐理龙 - Ismet Himmet.
In terms of the flavor, what I have seen from our Xuan Wu Pai Practitioners compared to other places, the style is pretty much more 'simple' at Mt Wudang (like a simple 'walk-through') and does not emphasize too much on small circles. It's more of a large frame.
Apart from this, between 2000-2001, when I was studying in Northeast China, an old Taijiquan Teacher of my 1st Wudang Shifu was also teaching Zhaobao, and his flavor was also far different. It was a very LOW FRAME practice (Xia Pan).
What I teach today is mostly Zhong Pan (the middle frame); from time to time, I also like the high frame with very small movements.
Sehr harmonisch
Non ce n est pas du zhaobaotaiji.