Hello kuro obi master, I'm vietnamese, I hope you read this cm of mine. I apologize if my English is not good. In my country, karate is a very popular martial art, it is present in almost every city. In addition, karate is a mandatory martial art of the police. I love karate and regularly follow your channel. I love how the kuro obi master's basic moves are conveyed. Unfortunately there are some videos without subtitles, I watch and just guess the content. I wonder if you can remake the videos with subtitles, about master Shorinji kempo? I wanted to get a deeper understanding of karate, from where it was born, from the Japanese. Thank you
@gustavogus692 Жыл бұрын
One of the things I hate the most is bait titles. There is no spar in this video. This was the first and last video I saw in your channel.
@godabandonedmesoibecameaba8984 Жыл бұрын
@@gustavogus692title doesn't say anything about spar and this video shows aikido and how it can deal with other martial arts which is pretty cool
@gustavogus692 Жыл бұрын
@@godabandonedmesoibecameaba8984 The title say "REALISTIC". There is no realism in the video whatsoever.
@karllanicollas2479 Жыл бұрын
E mandarin
@annadickson3097 Жыл бұрын
Shirakawa Shihan is a unique man and an unusual aikido master. He has great knowledge about other martial arts and enjoys learning other techniques. I admire his openness, intelligence and sense of humor. He's not afraid to try. I've watched many videos of Shirakawa interacting with other martial artists and he's always great. I respect and admire him. Thank you for a great movie.
@nateaustin362 Жыл бұрын
It's funny he was compared to Bruce Lee... The way he explains and uses Akido is so familiar. He certainly shares a style of mannerisms to the hero himself
This is why I love this channel! Mutual respect between three senseis of different systems.
@chillbro2275Ай бұрын
And they were all so cheerful, and jovial. :D I watched the whole thing without subtitles, and still enjoyed it.
@OTTAOTTA64 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Really. This was the greatest demostration of how masters should be, regardless the discipline they teach. They're all so powerful and fast and skillful, but so humble at the same time, recognising strenght and weakness of their own discipline confronting the others. A lesson of martial arts which was a pleasure watching. A lesson of life. 👏👏👏👏👏👏
@gordonarthur6365 Жыл бұрын
This is very impressive. Shirakawa Ryuji Sensei is more flexible and familiar with all martial arts than any other Aikido master. He is very humble and bright. I can say that he is the Aikido superstar. Oss.
@TBButtSmoothy Жыл бұрын
Yup, i respect him. He is real with what he knows and comes up with ways, studies and has great cross-disciplinary friends to learn and adapt
@JohnPeacekeeper Жыл бұрын
One of the most important aspects of Aikido is also the practice of humility, both for practical (never underestimating your attacker) and mental reasons (it's not meant for glory, but for peace) This is why Steven Seagal is not a true Aikido practitioner, because he uses it to fuel his arrogance
@lopa-u9f7 ай бұрын
@@JohnPeacekeeper that's a misperception, not arrogance or inflated ego as many think but a miscommunication and misunderstanding and, him not being perfect and not knowing what to do to express himself to be understood - finally he stopped caring, it's called growth and that is what mastery comes from check out the video with him with that Jesse guy, you can see how he handles the nonsense better now
@もつ-r8s Жыл бұрын
中野先生の帯、元は黒帯で鍛錬しすぎて色が抜けて白になったってエピソードかっこよすぎる
@andreasbaden1678 ай бұрын
The nice thing about your videos is that you laugh a lot and have fun. This makes watching and interest in your martial art fun. Great respect for your art.
@Hfhf-bt7ww7 ай бұрын
He's laughing at the stupid watchers who believe in his "REALISTIC FIGHTS"...
@chillbro2275Ай бұрын
Oh this is normally how the content is? I should subscribe then.
@williambrown1095 Жыл бұрын
So amazing to watch 3 masters working together! Thanks to all 3!
@ubiratanmenezes19793 ай бұрын
I got in touch with Aikido in 2008 after praticing many other martial arts. That's when i fell in love with Aikido and never stopped training since then, not because is better than other arts, but because it suits for me. Shirakawa Sensei is a genius. He thinks in a very practical way about applying aikido basics in every type of movement. Even when he doesn't perform an usual aikido technique his movements are 100% aikido. It's a bless watching these great masters teaching together! Thanks for sharing! 🙏
@neotenylv09 Жыл бұрын
As a Karate and Aikido practitioner, this is very instructive and fun to watch! Oss 🥋
Not only a skilled person. But also a kind and sympathic man. Dear Shirakawa. Thanks for this inside information.
@JordanClymer-fh3pf9 ай бұрын
I love seeing these men have great respect for each other and their masteries, along with great enthusiasm for their arts and techniques (their own and each others). You can see their love is for the martial skills and not "which is best". Their pride is dissolved by childlike joy and curiosity as they explore the different styles of the arts, giving much credit and respect to each other's skills. We just need more humans like this. Keep doing what you do! Even beyond the martial art, your inner art is just as beautiful.
@strangerjoe6766 Жыл бұрын
Очень крутое видео. Встретились три мастера и вместо намерения убить друг друга у них открытый обмен опытом и юмор. При этом в демонстрациях за юмором чувствуется реальная сила каждого. Спасибо, что показали, к чему надо стремиться! И респект за антиформализм, айкидо не должно быть жёстким и застывшим.
@punymagus Жыл бұрын
I always wanted to tell people how Aikido isn't only the form they see, but it's about applying the concepts taught through the form, but no one would listen because I'm nobody lol. Now I'm glad that Sensei Shirakawa did that and it's comforting to know I didn't understand it wrong. In my years of practice I never heard anything that limits the art to it's form only, but I guess even most of the people that practice Aikido don't realize that.
@tavtav3526 Жыл бұрын
It's not just aikido, wing chun, & other martial art practitioner usually trapped in form only exercise. Actually the more you have understanding the more you won't stick to the formal form. Do Muhammad Ali & Mike Tyson looks like a formal boxing? No master looks like he's using formal technique. If then you see some TMA winning and see ppl say, ''I don't see any wing chun/aikido, etc.'' They just don't understand what they see, say, and straight being ignorant.
@jimbojones6206 Жыл бұрын
@@tavtav3526 I don't watch UFC / MMA / whatever TMA is, but chances are the techniques used in pressure testing such as sparring are much closer to Wrestling, BJJ for grappling and Boxing or Karate for fists. There's this one Aikido blackbelt who has adapted his techniques for sparring, so they exist, but most fighters haven't learned those and rely on more pressure tested martial arts.
@tavtav3526 Жыл бұрын
@@jimbojones6206 Someone who doesn't train martial art probably think every martial is impractical. Someone who's good at martial art is probably think every martial art is practical. It depends on someone level of understanding. Do you know Rokas, Icy Mike, and their famous martial art friends? They made a project together. You can see which among them have better skill and understanding just from their opinion about some TMA.
@jimbojones6206 Жыл бұрын
@@tavtav3526 No I don't know them and don't watch too much stuff, I'd rather spent my time in boxing class like I did today. Anyways I'm not saying the techniques are useless, but that some martial arts don't do much pressure testing for their techniques. And that's like learning a language with audio tapes and books without ever going to the country speaking it: slow and ineffective. Possible dangerous because you're overestimating your skills. I've seen that happen in Krav Maga classes (one got an outchie on the nose and it was over, that was 30 mins after telling me my Karate background was impractical).
@MizanQistina Жыл бұрын
@@tavtav3526 Those you mentioned are just You Tube fake experts, they only looking for views and popularity, making money. If really want to learn MA, learn it direct to the source.
@v-doc5230 Жыл бұрын
I watch often online videos about martial arts, to get new ideas for my own Aikido. One thing that is apparent often is that western martial arts videos often focus on how "bad" the respective other martial art is. Especially Aikido gets a lot of bad comments, because people believe it does not work. I really like the videos of sensei shirakawa ryuji and his "guests", because it is always on par, with the interest in the respective other martial art. Exchanging ideas, discovering how things work. This is very inspirational and shows what martial arts are about. Not to best others. But oneself. Thank you for these videos!
@francescodauria2884 Жыл бұрын
Ma a chi crede xhe l aikido non funzioni si sbaglia di grosso ok
I think my favorite thing about this video is that none of the martial artists are saying theirs is the superior form. They're simply doing something of a compare and contrast - saying stuff like "because I know he's gonna to x, I'm gonna do/avoid y". And then Shirakawa Shihan goes into the aikido-specific stuff like how with that iriminage to the face, he wasn't pushing the face but going up and over via the chin.
@michajaworski2244 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see realistic, perfectly trained aikido in action. This martial art is challenging but also rewarding. Thank's for uploading this video. Interesting and... useful.
E quella è l essenza dell aikido muoversi con noncuranza in qualsiasi situazione e non è facile
@nateaustin362 Жыл бұрын
I love Akido at its peak. So graceful and commanding.
@sunbladerr Жыл бұрын
Thank you. This was a pleasure to see. Living in the USA, I am exposed to so much MMA foolishness. I was blessed to have the opportunity to train with Shihan Ed Baker and Sensei Pete Easton. They did not teach fighting but trained for specific responses to specific stimulus. None of the AiKiDo thatI was taught could be forced. These gentleman show how any energy can be directed. Be Well and Good Journey Richie
@Squisky Жыл бұрын
Keep training. But I hope; for your sake and for your family's sake that you never encounter someone who knows how to fight out in the world. Keep your training to the dojo if it makes you feel good. You get a bit of a sweat on, you socialize, you pretend you're disarming swords, have a laugh, feel big when you throw people around. But please. Keep yourself safe. Don't try that out in a real fight or a self defence situation. All the best you your family B
@samuelturpin817610 ай бұрын
@@Squisky such arrogance
@LanceABoyle3 ай бұрын
And ignorance.
@comandoborba Жыл бұрын
Sou aikidoísta há 20 anos e todos os dias tenho muito a aprender. Muito Obrigado! (Domo Arigatô Gosaimatsu!)
@Metaltech806 ай бұрын
Parabéns. 20 anos desperdiçados numa arte marcial inútil em defesa pessoal.
what I really like is the permanent smile on the faces of the two people who do Aikido. Which is very important for me
@FinnMacCuhl Жыл бұрын
The humility and respect on display here is humbling.
@DustinGhia Жыл бұрын
What a wonderful collaboration!!! Thank a lot!!!! 😊😊😊😊
@daryback7103 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for creating this channel. I am a martial arts lover, and a rogue practitioner when I was a teen until my late 20s (believe it or not, true dojos still maintain the free day rule). I have been on 4 dojos under that rule. One of those was an Aikido dojo. It was a traditional one, following the 12 traditional Samurai Arts. While I like the concept and the application, it was extremely straight, it was like "You flow like so or you crash." My first thinking was: "This way it's just like a dance, the first to let go of the flow loses". That's why I always had issues trying to accept Aikido as I know it. This video showed me what I originally though of Aikido: a martial art which is fluid and adaptable, the most reliable countermeasure. You may need knowledge about the basics of the rest martial arts, but that comes with time and/or experience, I've touched Ju-Do, Tae-Kwon-Do, Aikido and some Ninjitsu movement techniques, more like field techniques. Excluding the basic kicks from Tae-Kwon-Do and a couple of basic throws, all I know is how to control my body and ground play. This video makes me wonder if I can still do some martial arts...
@292Artemis4 ай бұрын
This was very interesting, thank you for sharing! I'm an Aikidoka myself and I have tried various other MAs as well. Nakano-san's movements looked amazing! I have rarely seen someone move so flexibly and smoothly. Never heard of Taido before, gonna do some research now. :D
@juniorresende7908 Жыл бұрын
Parabéns a todos, eu sou do Brasil, e admiro muito sua técnica , tanto defesa e ataques, valeu! grandes mestres.
@ヨシダヒナ Жыл бұрын
白川先生凄いな。カッコイイ😍
@matthewbreytenbach4483 Жыл бұрын
This was really fascinating, thank you.
@donelmore2540 Жыл бұрын
I’ve seen this Tai-do Sensei before in these videos and I really like Tai-do. He’s the first, and only, Tai-do practitioner that I’ve ever seen. I’ve done a little Aikido and have great appreciation for it as well. In 3 years, it will be 60 years since I started Karate. LOL
@kingsman8475 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I learned more judo in 2 months than 8 months of karate from the same sensei.
@vedranrakinic Жыл бұрын
Wonderful to look at various options, thank You🙏🙇
@Zzzzzii7988 Жыл бұрын
Great video! It's very interesting!
@muteqx Жыл бұрын
I love this channel so much! 🙏
@cody1661 Жыл бұрын
Amazing! Shirakawa Ryuji sensei is the top.
@hughjazz4936 Жыл бұрын
Loved the mutual respect they've showed one another. Also, look at the karate-ka's hands, that guy doesn't play around.
@雅.翔 Жыл бұрын
10:00 「なります」 のインパクトたるや😂
@glong2720 Жыл бұрын
I believe it would be an absolute pleasure to learn from such masters as in this clip. Thank you for sharing. They truly seem to have open minds and willingness to teach, learn and learn more.
@ReiKakariki Жыл бұрын
The beauty of the vídeo is show the majesty and the Harmony of any martial arts as aikido, karate and taido respect each other and learn with each other. This harmony we call budo. The West should more learn budo not only martial artes more than This philosophy of action and martial arts🎉. Oss.
@blockmasterscott Жыл бұрын
Oh, a collaboration between two of my favorite channels!
@blockmasterscott Жыл бұрын
I was reading some of these comments saying Aikido doesn't work. I'm pretty sure that policemen all over the world would disagree with that. Heck, I've read excerpts from bouncers saying that they use Aikido on the job.
@iatsd Жыл бұрын
heh. I've seen it in practice. I've watched a BJJ bouncer take a guy to the ground instead of doing his job and throwing the guy out of the bar. The drunk's mates thought this was fantastic and kicked the living shite out of him while he was fvcking about on the ground. There are some really competent BJJ people out there, but holyfvck, an awful lot of them seem to be fvcking idiots.
@victorrodriguez-pk5xz Жыл бұрын
Actually aikido its pretty useless in real situations xd
@iatsd Жыл бұрын
@@victorrodriguez-pk5xz That'll be why so many police forces and prison systems around the world include it as part of their training, yeah? But hey, I'm sure you know more than them, right?
@tuantran-gi8pn Жыл бұрын
@@victorrodriguez-pk5xz bullshit cmt 😂
@ordafles5360 Жыл бұрын
@@victorrodriguez-pk5xz If aikido is useless bjj needs to be useless as well because their roots go back to samurai war system.
@АлександрКарпенко-щ5к Жыл бұрын
Уровень жизнерадостности и доброжелательности японцев в этом ролике зашкаливает!!!
@shawnaraikum2567 Жыл бұрын
It took them until 9 min 18 sec to say what I sensed briefly watching a few aikido practitioners when ask to, MANY years ago. They were (multiply) trained I intuited. Then I felt (am hard-hearted, hardly EVER feel) lightness of air. Sensed breath. Knew I could never ever achieve same in this lifetime....
Thanks so much for sharing its very impressive great sensei!!!
@brianmi40 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic to see the mutual respect each has for the other's techniques and skill!
@louis6legros1975 Жыл бұрын
Merci pour les contenus de vôtre chaîne, toujours instructif et bienveillant. Salutations de france 🙏
@krzysztofkarcz5996 Жыл бұрын
Super się ogląda takie przemyślenia
@bobblav34467 ай бұрын
Magnifique ! thanks you for this expérience.
@mohammadamina.baniaga38695 ай бұрын
"You dont have to follow Aikido movements all the time"...This is so trueee❤ I also realized this just after a few years doing Karate....Like in a real fight, its better if you could be more resourceful in various styles and techniques from different martial arts
@web-cams5873 Жыл бұрын
凄いコラボ❗🤩😳😲
@lillijd4 ай бұрын
Aikido❤❤❤❤
@commodore64266 ай бұрын
Discovered a new martial art through this video, Taido. Very interesting
@tomsta9031 Жыл бұрын
Love to kuro- & aikido❤
@hermessantosjunior Жыл бұрын
Os movimentos do lutador de Taidô se parecem com os da "Capoeira"! Ótimo vídeo, parabéns!
@thexalon Жыл бұрын
I studied basics of aikido about 15 years ago. By far the most useful techniques I learned had to do with handling falling properly, because the number of scraps I've gotten into are pretty close to 0, but the number of times I've fallen is much much higher. As far as the defense techniques, so much of it is simply about not being where the person who attacked you thought you'd be. All the top aikidoka I've seen are very focused on footwork and dodging, and the contact, joint locks, and throws that aikido is known for are almost an afterthought.
@nateaustin362 Жыл бұрын
I couldn't agree more.
@JohnPeacekeeper Жыл бұрын
The way my sensei taught me the fundamentals was to move away and simultaneously use the opponent's momentum with quick grapple counters
@thexalon Жыл бұрын
@@JohnPeacekeeper I'm not sure which lineage you learned from - the dojo I trained at was ASU - but we focused on turning movements (tenkan) and entering movements (irimi), both of which tend to put you right behind the person who attacked you. Which makes you hard to hit, and also may confuse them because if you moved quickly you went from "right in front of them and they're trying to punch you" to "not visible".
@JohnPeacekeeper Жыл бұрын
@thexalon I don't remember mine, because I was still like 12 years old at the time. I just have the muscle memory now... Similarly though, the angle they put me at was more to the side, 45 degrees from the opponent, with immediate counter attack
@patheddles400411 ай бұрын
It's a meme, but "best defence is not be there" really is an extremely useful principle.
Fugindo totalmente do estilo, do verdadeiro Aikido.
@tomramzul Жыл бұрын
Master Taka is deadly dangerous. you can feel it in his moves
@arifinaja963 Жыл бұрын
Finally.. an aikido praticioner that says "you can't grab a punch". Respect for him 👍 Edit: and thanks to this channel too for introducing me the art of Taido
@josephmalone253 Жыл бұрын
He said "you can't catch a punch"? You misheard him or his comments were cut and edited without context. It's more like he said "you cannot enter to catch a punch this way". This would be more accurate based on the physical movements shown. In truth catching a punch is easy.
@lunelie7724 Жыл бұрын
@@josephmalone253 a master of karate say if someone catch your punch, stop karate.
@josephmalone253 Жыл бұрын
@@lunelie7724 do they? Why? That sounds like ego. Seriously all kata is catching punches. As a white belt I threw a punch and it was caught on my first day. Should I have quit? No that would be foolish. Catching punches is all day everyday in black belt courses in karate. It should be what is taught since day one but they want to keep people beginners. Who ever you are referencing is a) not a master or b) is a master eliminating competition by watering down the arts.
@josephmalone253 Жыл бұрын
@@lunelie7724 case in point: Kake uke, kakete uke, tsurikomi uke etc. This is karate with the expressed purpose of catching a punch am I not mistaken? I think the problem is your masters do not live in a violent world where street violence is the norm but then again I have seen the cities they reside in and think they just spend most of their time in the safe parts of town. I go where the help is needed the most.
@lunelie7724 Жыл бұрын
@@josephmalone253 by catch in aikido and i mean, is grab. A block, it's not a catch for me. Did you ever see Bruce Lee fast punch? Speed and strength from a well trained people is too heavy, to possibly grab (or catch) a punch. If you can grab a punch, you are good or/and your partner are weak. A punch speed from fast karateka is 10 to 15m/s. If your opponent stay from you to 1m, a punch will touch you in 0,1s. Human reaction time is 0,7s, few people can react in 0,4s. Also its not possible to catch (grab) a karateka well trained. If your punch is grabbed, train more, more speed, more strength, more technics.
@MarkoObradovich Жыл бұрын
Fantastic senseis 💪👍👊
@DaddyHensei10 ай бұрын
It's so refreshing to see unbound Aikido.
@Level_One Жыл бұрын
Hello kuro obi master, I'm vietnamese, I hope you read this cm of mine. I apologize if my English is not good. In my country, karate is a very popular martial art, it is present in almost every city. In addition, karate is a mandatory martial art of the police. I love karate and regularly follow your channel. I love how the kuro obi master's basic moves are conveyed. Unfortunately there are some videos without subtitles, I watch and just guess the content. I wonder if you can remake the videos with subtitles, about master Shorinji kempo? I wanted to get a deeper understanding of karate, from where it was born, from the Japanese. Thank you
@bearsnevergiveup10 ай бұрын
the spinning/kneeling move at the beginning was cool.
@lelfet31775 ай бұрын
The art is purely defensive ... but the attacker is taking his strength back. And also learning his weakness in defense.
@warmfrost14 ай бұрын
when aikido goes to a real fight then ill believe
@vladmansproduction3123 Жыл бұрын
Выпьем за любовь!
@thomasflores7817Ай бұрын
i always used to joke like "master kims black belt is so worn it looks like a white belt", but this guy is much more deserving of such a statement
@carlodefalco7930 Жыл бұрын
Karate guy is awesome, I’m sure he’s a real killer , seen him here before n never lets his ego get in the way of others doing their techniques on him . But ild like to see any of them , how they go if he attacked , defended a little more seriously
@iatsd Жыл бұрын
Why would any of them put themselves in actual danger just to enterntain you? Going at it "a little more seriously" is simply going to get people hurt. "But what if...." is the game idiots play.
@toppappa Жыл бұрын
白川先生を怖いと言う中野先生はエグい、『競技ではやらないですけど😊』実戦なら😱
@granadosvm Жыл бұрын
First time I see Taido. Gave me some Capoeira vibes on the sense of their ability to launch very long moves by hiding them in a whirl of misdirection.
@LanceABoyle3 ай бұрын
Neither would work in the Cage!
@MathieuMbro10 ай бұрын
Wahou: il esquive excellemment bien les attaques ce maître d'aïkido !
@kartatay-ru Жыл бұрын
Выпустите его на ринг против Федора Емельяненко.
@hindagsxr Жыл бұрын
Nicely shown reducing the distance in aikido
@18juergen65 Жыл бұрын
Sehr lehrreich 😊
@towag Жыл бұрын
Aikido can be applied to all attacks... Its about having an open mind and not getting stuck in a style or dogma... Its important to have some kind of safe sparring to understand all kinds of attack... I'm very glad to see this kind of open mindedness, as I think its important to experiment to test oneself... In my younger years I worked as a doorman to earn extra money.... I found the Tomiki style of aikido very easily adaptable & practical to deal with troublemakers because of its competitive sport aspect in randori shiai... It really IS all in the application....
@delovoidelovoi8876 Жыл бұрын
Этих танцоров ! Надо в мма выпускать😂
@1212CRMD8 ай бұрын
Best regards from Brazil.
@СэмСникерсов Жыл бұрын
давайте спаринг всё ждал его так и не дождался
@francescodauria2884 Жыл бұрын
E pensare che se um aikidoka farebbe sul serio nelle sue mosse potrebbe spezzare le ossa senza problemi e poi la vera 3ssenza dell aikido è di porre fine a un combattimento subito e con il minimo sforzo questo almeno in origine . Quindi l aikido e una bellissima arte marziale nonostante sto vedendo che tante persone non apprezzsno l aikido . Per me è un arte marziale da rispettare senza ombra di dubbio
@vvv9142 Жыл бұрын
Хороший канал. А тут ещё и Сирикавой сенсеем. Вообще супер. Молодцы. Спасибо