Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Lock On Volumes 1 & 2 just released
LOCK ON!
Lock On Loint Locking Essentials volumes 1 & 2 have just been released.
Volume 1 focuses on wrist locks and volume 2 focuses on arm bars and elbow locks. These are the first two of a five part series that will set the standard for joint lock instruction.
Hapkido and Self-defense instructor Alain Burrese, whos previous videos with Paladin Press have recieved excellent reviews, provides detailed instruction on various joint locks enabling the viewer to actually learn how to perform each lock, and more importantly learn the principles behind the locks to go beyond the video instruction to truely master this important ingredient to many martial art curriculums.
If you are a martial artist, law enoforcement officer, security, or someone who wants to add joint locking skill to your self-defense tool box, these dvds are a must. Buy them now and achive a higher level in your training.
Check them out at the Aiki Store: http://www.aikiproductions.com/store/dvd.html
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Take Care - Be Aware presentation
Alain Burrese will be speaking at the 2007 Women's Symposium in Missoula, MT on Saturday Feb. 3, 2007.
The presentation will focus on awareness, avoidance, safety and self-defense issues. Alain is currently developing different programs in this area for Aiki Productions as well as his Lock On series.
More about the symposium can be found here:
http://mbn.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=0&club_id=431640
A list of the Symposium speakers can be found here:
http://mbn.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=431640&module_id=15828
The presentation will focus on awareness, avoidance, safety and self-defense issues. Alain is currently developing different programs in this area for Aiki Productions as well as his Lock On series.
More about the symposium can be found here:
http://mbn.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=0&club_id=431640
A list of the Symposium speakers can be found here:
http://mbn.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=431640&module_id=15828
Thursday, January 11, 2007
GM Han - Time to step it up a notch
With the passing of GM Han, a friend of mine made a keen statement. He said all of us in martial arts should step it up a notch.
We have lost a great ambassador of the arts, not just Hapkido, but all martial arts. Those of us still training, learning, teaching, and participating in the arts must rise to the occasion to help fill the loss.
When a great influence is lost, it is up to the rest of us to fill that void. We can do so by using GM Han as an example. We can strive to be the best martial artists - the best people we can be. We can help our arts and live as a warrior with the ideals of honor and integrity at the top of our values. We can rise to the occasion and strive to do as much for the martial arts as GM Han did. Big shoes to fill, but we can strive for it and all of us can make a difference too.
Alain
We have lost a great ambassador of the arts, not just Hapkido, but all martial arts. Those of us still training, learning, teaching, and participating in the arts must rise to the occasion to help fill the loss.
When a great influence is lost, it is up to the rest of us to fill that void. We can do so by using GM Han as an example. We can strive to be the best martial artists - the best people we can be. We can help our arts and live as a warrior with the ideals of honor and integrity at the top of our values. We can rise to the occasion and strive to do as much for the martial arts as GM Han did. Big shoes to fill, but we can strive for it and all of us can make a difference too.
Alain
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
GM Bong Soo Han dies
Hapkido grand master Bong Soo Han died on January 8, 2007 at 6:00 PM at his home in Santa Monica surrounded by his family and friends. I was very fortunate to have had the opportunity to visit with GM Bong Soo Han in his California office and then return to attend a black belt class he was teaching. It saddens me to learn of his passing. He was a great Hapkidoin and the entire martial art community will miss him. It is all of our loss that he is no longer teaching or with us. His role is the Billy Jack films helped introduce Hapkido to many people, myself included. It was a contributing factor to me seeking out Hapkido as a martial art to pursue. - Alain
You can learn more at GM Bong Soo Han's webite:http://www.bongsoohanhapkido.com/
Additionally, here is an article that has been posted on the internet:
Hollywood's Martial Arts Teacher Dies - By DANNY POLLOCK, Associated PressWriter
Monday, January 8, 2007 (01-08) 20:22 PST LOS ANGELES, (AP)-- Korean martial arts master Bong Soo Han, who helped revolutionize Hollywood's understanding of martial arts by creating fight sequences for modern American films, died on Monday. He was 73. Han died at his home in Santa Monica, said John Davis, director of operations for the International Hapkido Federation, which Han founded.
The cause of death was not disclosed. Han, who held a 9th-degree black belt and the title of grand master in Hapkido, dedicated his life to spreading the martial art, which combines the kicking and punching of Taekwondo and the joint locks and graceful throws of Judo. Often called the father of Hapkido in the Western world, Han was careful about whom he promoted, awarding only slightly more than 100 black belts in more than 35 years of teaching in the United States. Many martial artists in Hollywood trained with him. "Grand Master Han is one of the finest men I have ever met, and it has beenan honor to call him a friend for over 30 years," action star and martial arts expert Chuck Norris once told The Associated Press.
Legendary Kung Fu Grand Master Eric Lee described Han as a true gentleman. "Everybody says he's a grand master-this or grand master-that, but they don't act like it," Lee said of other martial arts experts. " He does. He has a lot of quiet inside and peace that we can all learn from."
Han was discovered by Hollywood in 1969, shortly after he arrived in theUnited States, while giving a Hapkido demonstration at a park near Malibu. Actor Tom Laughlin saw him perform and asked for help with his action film "Billy Jack." Up to that time, most martial arts scenes in movies were portrayed by actors with little martial arts training. Han choreographed fight scenesfor the film, now a cult classic, and served as a stunt man, demonstrating a level of martial arts skill rarely seen before. Han also worked on the 1988 thriller "The Presidio," as well as other action films, and was featured in Wesley Snipes' 1998 documentary "Masters of the Martial Arts."
He began studying martial arts as a boy in his native Seoul and trained under the founder of Hapkido, Young Sul Choi. He opened his first school in Seoul in 1959 and later taught self-defense to U.S. forces in Korea and Vietnam before coming to Los Angeles, where he set up his own school and frequently offered seminars for FBI agents. He wrote the 1974 classic "Hapkido, The Korean Art of Self-Defense" and produced a series of instructional videotapes. He was also the founder and president of the International HapkidoFederation, which has affiliate schools in California, Hawaii, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas and Indiana.
You can learn more at GM Bong Soo Han's webite:http://www.bongsoohanhapkido.com/
Additionally, here is an article that has been posted on the internet:
Hollywood's Martial Arts Teacher Dies - By DANNY POLLOCK, Associated PressWriter
Monday, January 8, 2007 (01-08) 20:22 PST LOS ANGELES, (AP)-- Korean martial arts master Bong Soo Han, who helped revolutionize Hollywood's understanding of martial arts by creating fight sequences for modern American films, died on Monday. He was 73. Han died at his home in Santa Monica, said John Davis, director of operations for the International Hapkido Federation, which Han founded.
The cause of death was not disclosed. Han, who held a 9th-degree black belt and the title of grand master in Hapkido, dedicated his life to spreading the martial art, which combines the kicking and punching of Taekwondo and the joint locks and graceful throws of Judo. Often called the father of Hapkido in the Western world, Han was careful about whom he promoted, awarding only slightly more than 100 black belts in more than 35 years of teaching in the United States. Many martial artists in Hollywood trained with him. "Grand Master Han is one of the finest men I have ever met, and it has beenan honor to call him a friend for over 30 years," action star and martial arts expert Chuck Norris once told The Associated Press.
Legendary Kung Fu Grand Master Eric Lee described Han as a true gentleman. "Everybody says he's a grand master-this or grand master-that, but they don't act like it," Lee said of other martial arts experts. " He does. He has a lot of quiet inside and peace that we can all learn from."
Han was discovered by Hollywood in 1969, shortly after he arrived in theUnited States, while giving a Hapkido demonstration at a park near Malibu. Actor Tom Laughlin saw him perform and asked for help with his action film "Billy Jack." Up to that time, most martial arts scenes in movies were portrayed by actors with little martial arts training. Han choreographed fight scenesfor the film, now a cult classic, and served as a stunt man, demonstrating a level of martial arts skill rarely seen before. Han also worked on the 1988 thriller "The Presidio," as well as other action films, and was featured in Wesley Snipes' 1998 documentary "Masters of the Martial Arts."
He began studying martial arts as a boy in his native Seoul and trained under the founder of Hapkido, Young Sul Choi. He opened his first school in Seoul in 1959 and later taught self-defense to U.S. forces in Korea and Vietnam before coming to Los Angeles, where he set up his own school and frequently offered seminars for FBI agents. He wrote the 1974 classic "Hapkido, The Korean Art of Self-Defense" and produced a series of instructional videotapes. He was also the founder and president of the International HapkidoFederation, which has affiliate schools in California, Hawaii, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas and Indiana.
Sunday, January 07, 2007
Lock On Volume 1 Wrist Locks update
Just a little update regarding Lock On Volume 1. We are still waiting for the proofs before releasing it for sale. More will be posted on the Aiki website real soon.
For a clip from volume 1, check this out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1b5JFIg8sjQ