On another note,Kajukenbo is a very effective art from Hawaii, developed by some very capable street fighters who all had a variety of different backgrounds. I have never formally studied this art, but I have over 5 decades of study in Jujutsu, which also include 40 years of teaching, and additionally, several decades also in my training Aikido, Kenjutsu, Judo and others that are not important to mention and I have had the pleasure to evaluate this art very carefully, as well as its origins, and will say with confidence, the practitioners who study this under qualified people, are very capable individuals. My advice is instead of armchair quarterbacking the art from a video, go to a certified Kajukenbo instructor and ask him if you can test out his techniques, then you will get an informed answer, I'm sure of it. JMHO
The point I was trying to make with Kajukenbo is, or any hybrid for that matter. If you are a Kempo man, you will see kempo- a judoka, you will see judo. A hybrid art will contain elements of its original style(s) yet be different in many ways. You may see the differences where someone else may see what is the same. This does not mean that either of you are wrong or right for your perception. A modified Irimi nage is both same- and different. _/\_
I think when anyone is observing another MA, they see it from their own point of reference. If you do kung fu, you see kung fu; if you do jujutsu, you see jujutsu. I do kenpo, so I see kenpo. Anyone's opinion is based on their own experience and perspective. Besides, there are only so many unique ways of moving offensively and defensively before you begin to see similarities. Everything comes from everything else.
Я тренер из школы ЛАМ-СОН вы совершенно верно говорите,а то многие диванные пургу всякую несут.потомушто они сами ничего не умеют и обсирают все школы.
Sorry about that, but auto spelling and auto correct suggested that word!! Besides, this martial art and krav maga are very effective for the lay person!
All masters display counters to slow and artificial attacks. It is easy to perform any techniques against those. But do these work in a non-orchestrated situation, which is fast, strong and unpredictable?
Si funcionan ,cuando se realiza con máxima velocidad,ahora lo hace lento para ver la técnica...lo único que no me gusta de este estilo y de casi todos,son las técnicas de defensa contra cuchillo!! Soy practicante de kajukenbo y Muay Thai...
yo soy practicante y si funciona, aunque veas en el ataque siete u ocho golpes, los importantes son los tres primero,s luego es para coger coordinacion y manejo de diferentes alturas y con ambas manos, en los videos se hacen despacio para que se vea la tecnica en la realidad se hace a mucha velocidad y se practica mucho los endurecimientos de piernas ,low kick y antebrazos, no se bloquea se golpea y hace daño..lo mejor es probarlo
Really. So the "jujitsu" that you practice is a mix of Jujitsu, Karate, Judo, Kenpo, Western Boxing, Chinese Boxing and Eskrima, too? Because that's what this art is.
Since i can name all the techniques used in this video with japanese jujitsu techniques, it's not really a mix. I, on the other hand, would like to see more. If there's something new i'm always open to it.
Siento respeto por este maestro que ha dedicado su vida a este arte, pero la parte de los cuchillos no la veo real para que funcione en la vida moderna.
Yorgan Ferret This video come from a pedagogic seminar, after technics aquisitions and understanding the movement it's other. SGM Garcia is really a great practissionner in escrima too.
Todo Sensei merece su respeto , pero las técnicas que tiene para el desarme de cuchillo , si haces eso en la calle no sales vivo . No lo veo un Arte Marcial resolutivo por lo menos para la pelea callejera .
The majority takedowns are clearly Judo/Jujutsu, however if you trained in Kenpo and escrima you will recognize those techniques or patterns. Limb destruction for instance, classic escrima.
Folks if you are going to actually study an art, please at least pay it the respect it deserves, by fully researching it and learning to spell it correctly. It is Japanese JUJUTSU not Jujitsu and not Jiu Jitsu these last two names do not exist in the Japanese terminology or Japanese Hiragana for the art and any reference made to Jujitsu was incorrect spelling and was never corrected.
According with several sources, the "KEN" in KAJUKENBO stands for "KENPO" KA - KARATE JU - JUDO / JIU-JITSU (Some sources say its JUDO, some others say JIU-JITSU) KEN - KENPO BO - Boxing
No, i practised Ju jitsu at time, now i teach Kajukenbo and Escrima, and it's really different. Lines of actions and so on...But a can understand people how never try Kajukenbo and just watch video can tell it, but it's rong idea!
@@Hanshi64 😅 it's a kanji bro, ju jitsu or ju jutsu, stupid latin translation, it's like kenpo or kenpo, kanji are not translated japanese is japanese isn't it!
@@nathanowieczka8555 actually it’s not it’s Hirigana Kanji is the symbol used for Jujutsu but the word is derived from the Japanese language origin which means it is Hirigana. If it was a foreign language origin it would Katakana. So yes, Nathan in a way you are correct the Kanji is in fact from Chinese origin adopted by the Japanese to depict a single word. However, I am referring to the written word Jujutsu.
Not really! I've been practicing martial arts for more than 20 years and it looks like the japanese jujitsu i know. None of the techniques are different, not a single one according to this video. Thanks anyway!
No disrespect Sir but it is Jujutsu, not Jujitsu Japanese only spell it JUJUTSU no other way is actually Japanese, only mistaken spellings for example Jiu jitsu is actually a Brazilian phonetical interpretation of the correct Jujutsu. I have been studying Japanese Jujutsu for 54 years and teaching it for 40 of those years.
Hmmm. What type of Jujutsu do you practice? I'm not expert-but ANY type of Japanese JJ that I've ever seen practiced looks NOTHING like this. As for this art-it was founded in the late 1940's and early 1950's by six young, Asian-American men. They combined Tang Soo Do, Judo, Jujutsu, Kenpo, Western Boxing, Chinese Boxing(Kung Fu), and Eskrima to create what you see here.
Que bueno exhibicion
Señor Angel Garcia, es Usted un gran Maestro. Gracias por sus videos
Fuy compañero de ángel en segur ibérica y es una persona excepcional y un gran compañero, un fuerte abrazo Ángel, eres un máquina.
On another note,Kajukenbo is a very effective art from Hawaii, developed by some very capable street fighters who all had a variety of different backgrounds.
I have never formally studied this art, but I have over 5 decades of study in Jujutsu, which also include 40 years of teaching, and additionally, several decades also in my training Aikido, Kenjutsu, Judo and others that are not important to mention and I have had the pleasure to evaluate this art very carefully, as well as its origins, and will say with confidence, the practitioners who study this under qualified people, are very capable individuals.
My advice is instead of armchair quarterbacking the art from a video, go to a certified Kajukenbo instructor and ask him if you can test out his techniques, then you will get an informed answer, I'm sure of it. JMHO
Super seminar!!
Ready for the next one in April, to learn more and more with Angel Garcia
Que bueno me gusta mucho
The point I was trying to make with Kajukenbo is, or any hybrid for that matter. If you are a Kempo man, you will see kempo- a judoka, you will see judo. A hybrid art will contain elements of its original style(s) yet be different in many ways. You may see the differences where someone else may see what is the same. This does not mean that either of you are wrong or right for your perception. A modified Irimi nage is both same- and different. _/\_
aloha from spain, angel simply the best, greetings
I think when anyone is observing another MA, they see it from their own point of reference. If you do kung fu, you see kung fu; if you do jujutsu, you see jujutsu. I do kenpo, so I see kenpo. Anyone's opinion is based on their own experience and perspective. Besides, there are only so many unique ways of moving offensively and defensively before you begin to see similarities. Everything comes from everything else.
Я тренер из школы ЛАМ-СОН вы совершенно верно говорите,а то многие диванные пургу всякую несут.потомушто они сами ничего не умеют и обсирают все школы.
Sorry about that, but auto spelling and auto correct suggested that word!! Besides, this martial art and krav maga are very effective for the lay person!
All masters display counters to slow and artificial attacks. It is easy to perform any techniques against those. But do these work in a non-orchestrated situation, which is fast, strong and unpredictable?
Si funcionan ,cuando se realiza con máxima velocidad,ahora lo hace lento para ver la técnica...lo único que no me gusta de este estilo y de casi todos,son las técnicas de defensa contra cuchillo!! Soy practicante de kajukenbo y Muay Thai...
yo soy practicante y si funciona, aunque veas en el ataque siete u ocho golpes, los importantes son los tres primero,s luego es para coger coordinacion y manejo de diferentes alturas y con ambas manos, en los videos se hacen despacio para que se vea la tecnica en la realidad se hace a mucha velocidad y se practica mucho los endurecimientos de piernas ,low kick y antebrazos, no se bloquea se golpea y hace daño..lo mejor es probarlo
Bonjour, On a pas de club sur Lille ! serait t'il possible qu'un jour...l'un de vos meilleur élèves s'installerait ici ?
I can"t help but think about the obvious heavy Hawaiian belly dancing influences.
kajukembo is solicitud baby
bad ass techniques
Really. So the "jujitsu" that you practice is a mix of Jujitsu, Karate, Judo, Kenpo, Western Boxing, Chinese Boxing and Eskrima, too? Because that's what this art is.
This looks exactly as japanese jujitsu, i see no difference at all. And yeah i practice jujitsu.
The jujitsu in kajukenbo is Japanese
I practice Ju Jitsu, too. It's true, but it seems there is not only Ju Jitsu.
JUJUTSU not Jujitsu
Maybe you should practice kajukenbo to feel the difference then.
Since i can name all the techniques used in this video with japanese jujitsu techniques, it's not really a mix. I, on the other hand, would like to see more. If there's something new i'm always open to it.
The take downs are Japanese jiu jitsu?
Siento respeto por este maestro que ha dedicado su vida a este arte, pero la parte de los cuchillos no la veo real para que funcione en la vida moderna.
Yorgan Ferret This video come from a pedagogic seminar, after technics aquisitions and understanding the movement it's other. SGM Garcia is really a great practissionner in escrima too.
al menos que te encuentres en ese predicamento tu personalmente es muy duro opinar...
Todo Sensei merece su respeto , pero las técnicas que tiene para el desarme de cuchillo , si haces eso en la calle no sales vivo . No lo veo un Arte Marcial resolutivo por lo menos para la pelea callejera .
The majority takedowns are clearly Judo/Jujutsu, however if you trained in Kenpo and escrima you will recognize those techniques or patterns. Limb destruction for instance, classic escrima.
Maybe if you researched Kajukenbo, you'd know that the "Ju" part of the system is Jujitsu!
Folks if you are going to actually study an art, please at least pay it the respect it deserves, by fully researching it and learning to spell it correctly. It is Japanese JUJUTSU not Jujitsu and not Jiu Jitsu these last two names do not exist in the Japanese terminology or Japanese Hiragana for the art and any reference made to Jujitsu was incorrect spelling and was never corrected.
Halfway between krav maga and jujitsu
JUJUTSU not Jujitsu
Looks like kenpo
Craigl Lacour64 Because Adriano Emperado and Ed Parker studed with William K.S Chow, every hawaiian and American kenpo styles come from Chow
According with several sources, the "KEN" in KAJUKENBO stands for "KENPO"
KA - KARATE
JU - JUDO / JIU-JITSU (Some sources say its JUDO, some others say JIU-JITSU)
KEN - KENPO
BO - Boxing
No, i practised Ju jitsu at time, now i teach Kajukenbo and Escrima, and it's really different. Lines of actions and so on...But a can understand people how never try Kajukenbo and just watch video can tell it, but it's rong idea!
JUJUTSU not Jujitsu
@@Hanshi64 😅 it's a kanji bro, ju jitsu or ju jutsu, stupid latin translation, it's like kenpo or kenpo, kanji are not translated japanese is japanese isn't it!
@@nathanowieczka8555 actually it’s not it’s Hirigana Kanji is the symbol used for Jujutsu but the word is derived from the Japanese language origin which means it is Hirigana. If it was a foreign language origin it would Katakana. So yes, Nathan in a way you are correct the Kanji is in fact from Chinese origin adopted by the Japanese to depict a single word. However, I am referring to the written word Jujutsu.
Not really! I've been practicing martial arts for more than 20 years and it looks like the japanese jujitsu i know. None of the techniques are different, not a single one according to this video. Thanks anyway!
No disrespect Sir but it is Jujutsu, not Jujitsu Japanese only spell it JUJUTSU no other way is actually Japanese, only mistaken spellings for example Jiu jitsu is actually a Brazilian phonetical interpretation of the correct Jujutsu. I have been studying Japanese Jujutsu for 54 years and teaching it for 40 of those years.
Hmmm. What type of Jujutsu do you practice? I'm not expert-but ANY type of Japanese JJ that I've ever seen practiced looks NOTHING like this. As for this art-it was founded in the late 1940's and early 1950's by six young, Asian-American men. They combined Tang Soo Do, Judo, Jujutsu, Kenpo, Western Boxing, Chinese Boxing(Kung Fu), and Eskrima to create what you see here.
😒😒😒😒😒😒😒😒😒😒😒😒🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
hummmmm..no,