I just heard there’s a new baji school in town. I’m not familiar with the style or this instructor, so I can’t really tell if he’s good or not. So I’m asking what do you think.
The Chinese instructor’s arm work is solid, but his stance could be stronger and deeper.
I don’t know if this instructor smacks trees regularly with full body strikes the way I’ve seen real Baji men do, but the reality of trying to maintain a proper structure after physical contact would change his leg mechanics.
Having seen this teacher demonstrate Baji (and Taijiquan), I can say he is very impressive. You have to see it for yourself, though, don’t take my word for it nor except the clip on the 'net as the final word (even if it is okay). I strongly recommend coming to the next demo.
Looks solid to me. I’m not an expert on Baji, and I don’t like to make comments about videos. However, I saw fluidity, good fa-jing etc. (the normal things you would expect to see from a qualified teacher)
Yeah there are. Liu Yun Chiao (sp?) is obviously the biggest exporter of Baji, but it appears there are several ‘family’ styles as well as ‘villiage’ styles.
The guy I trained under so briefly I won’t mention his name studied two different ‘family’ styles. His ‘flavor’ was distinctly different from what I have seen from the Taiwan group, and it definitly was NOT the modern wushu ‘style’.
Kinda neat. I suppose it will be like Shuai Chiao, where you mostly see Chang Tung Sheng’s students, but here and there you find somebody from a different lineage doing a different interpretation.
I loved the stuff, I was bummed when he moved away.
I am a big beleiver in luck. The more I work, the more luck I have.