April 14, 2003

Don Angier aikijiujitsu seminar, 12-13 April 2003, at Aikido of Diablo Valley

Now that I'm mostly recovered from this weekend's training - though still moving slowly - I'll mention this weekend's training I attended in Concord, California, conducted by Soke Don Angier of Yanagi Ryu Aiki Jiujitsu at Aikido of Diablo Valley, graciously hosted by Rick Rowell and Shari Dyer (who provided the photo below).


Don Angier countering 2-hand grab attack of Russell Whitaker

Mr. Angier is the only American soke of a Japanese family martial art, Yanagi Ryu Aiki Jiujitsu, an offshoot of the Daito Ryu tradition. He'll be turning 70 this year, and has been doing his art since 1958. He has an interesting story to tell, recounted in the article "'So Sorry! Jiu-jitsu Please, Not Judo!' My Career in Yanagi-ryu Aiki Jujutsu", originally printed in the May 2001 edition of Aikido Journal, and reprinted by the Journal of Combative Sport (an interesting venue, since Yanagi Ryu, like the Bujinkan arts I study, utterly lacks sporting elements).

My American teacher in the Bujinkan, Dale Seago, some years ago strongly recommended that his students take advantage of the fact that Mr. Angier was visiting San Francisco for a weekend seminar on the principles of his art. A number of us did indeed take Dale up on his recommendation, and a small core group of us make a point of training with Mr. Angier on the roughly yearly schedule he visits the San Francisco Bay area.

Don Angier teaches these 2-day seminars with a very small number of very specific techniques, which are vehicles for the important lessons: the principles behind martially effective movement, e.g. commutative locking, finding the opponent's weak lines, taking advantage of hardwired mammalian and reptilian visual responses to misdirection, etc. All physics, all anatomy & physiology.

As is usual at these events, we had a larger (18-20 people) group training the first day, and a small group of about half that size training the second day. Mr. Angier and his direct students Jeremy and Mort (great guys) circulated the room giving intensely minutely specific directions for correcting our movements.

The attendees were predominantly aikidoists, with a much smaller number of Bujinkan students. The purpose of the training was not to make us practicioners of Mr. Angier's art, but rather to take home the lessons of his training to our own arts and our own movement. I can't recommend his training highly enough. At $70 for the weekend, too, it was practically given away free. Train with him, if you have the opportunity.

Posted by Russell Whitaker at April 14, 2003 11:58 AM | TrackBack
Comments

Thank you Russell, very interesting, especially the link to Sensei's article!

Posted by: Terry Egan on April 14, 2003 07:59 PM

Ah! No offense whatsoever! I wasn't quite sure - I was ready for surprise - if you actually did train with Don, so I figured it was safe to ask.

You're predominantly correct in your translation, but Japanese makes distinctions between "in-group" use and "out-group" use which do not exist in English.

Posted by: Russell Whitaker on April 15, 2003 04:55 PM

i am an avid reader of combat manuals and fighting techniques in written volumes and am wondering where there is a dojo in the saginaw,michigan area or close to it please send me a link so that i may find a dojo that teaches the art of daito-ryu aikijiujtsu.

Respectfully
T.J. gomez

Posted by: tj gomez on December 3, 2004 11:52 AM

hey if u wanna dicuss stuff like judo and aikkido or whatever, this is a great site. check it out.


http://forum.judomonthly.com/

Posted by: alex mcintyre on July 1, 2007 04:56 PM

hey if u wanna dicuss stuff like judo and aikkido or whatever, this is a great site. check it out.


http://forum.judomonthly.com/

Posted by: alex mcintyre on July 1, 2007 04:57 PM
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