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Thread: BSL Lyrics: Shaolin #4 (Strike to the heart)

  1. #1
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    BSL Lyrics: Shaolin #4 (Strike to the heart)

    The central short BSL forms should be more interesting sicne undoubtably more people know them. Here goes!

    CHUM SAM: SHAOLIN #4 (Strike to the heart)
    1. Immortal steps forward, flicking his clothes, double punch.
    2. Spinning flower hand, seven stars, upper punch.
    3. Hero's single leg stance.
    4. Left jump, back coil kick.
    5. Grabbing arm, straight punch.
    6. Left and right punching.
    7. Step backwards, arm swing.
    8. Grabbing the moon's reflection in the sea, meteor punch.
    9. Left down push, right straight punch.
    10. Front and back heel kick, fishing pole pose.
    11. Lazy dragon stretches its spine.
    12. Stealing step, crescent kick, "crossed" character punch.
    13. Spinning flower hand, seven stars, upper punch.
    14. Hero's single leg stance.
    15. Brave tiger comes out of the cave, horse stance, block and punch.
    16. Closing the feet together, punching continuously.
    17. Piercing the heart, spinning flower hand, "crossed" character punch.
    18. Horse stance, fighting tiger pose.
    19. Bell and drum sound together, land, taming the tiger.
    20. Forward step, outside crescent kick.
    21. Turn around, grabbing the moon's reflection in the sea, meteor punch.
    22. Left down push, right straight punch.
    23. Front and back heel kick, fishing pole pose.
    24. Lazy dragon stretches its spine.
    25. Stealing step, crescent kick, "crossed" character punch.
    26. Spinning flower hand, seven stars, upper punch.
    27. Hero's single leg stance.
    28. Brave tiger comes out of the cave, horse stance, block and punch.
    29. Closing the feet together, punching continuously.
    30. Piercing the heart, spinning flower hand, "crossed" character punch.
    31. Horse stance, fighting tiger pose.
    32. Cat stance, strike to the groin.
    33. Turn around, horse stance, block and punch.
    34. Tornado kick.
    35. Rolling hand, spinning flower hand, golden rooster single leg stance.
    36. Brave tiger comes out of the mountain and catches the lamb.
    37. Right strike, "crossed" character kick.
    38. Right turn, left and right punching, horse stance.
    39. Spinning flower hand, step backward.
    40. Front and back sweep, slapping the ground,
    41. Double kick.
    42. Left turn, spinning flower hand, step backwards.
    43. Step backwards, threading hand, finish form.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
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    Same as Mine

    Gene,

    Everything is the same, even the translations.

    With these exceptions in translation:
    #2 Upper cut vs Cannon Fist

    #15, 28 & 38 Brave vs Vicious

    #19 Bell and Drum vs Bang the bell, call the birds...

    # 32 Cat Stancse, strike to the groin vs Cat stance, rub ghost with fist.

    Now in # 20 you call it 'Outside cresent kick'. At our school we perform a hanging split kick to the face which is really the same move in NSL#3 as in #10 (which I just realized I failed to mention in the SL# thread.) This kick is not a regular double kick but starts out like a double kick with the left leg but the right leg kick horizontally instead of vertically.

    The only difference that LTH does in this set is #20 where he has his students do a simple double kick.

  3. #3
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    I'm amazed that the translations are so simliar

    Your description of #20 sounds to be the same as ours. Perhaps that's a fault in out translation.
    Call the birds in an interesting translation, not usre what that refers to - same goes to rub ghost with fist. I like that one a lot - it's so unusual.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #4
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    Cool-

    Thanks!!! Gene and Nothern Shaolin
    館術國勇威 Wei Yong Martial Arts Association
    戰挑的權霸統傳 The Challenge for Traditional Supremacy
    http://www.weiyongkungfu.com
    _________________________
    What is 'traditional kung fu' ?
    Chinese fighting arts developed before the advent of the modern age in China. Not to be confused with modern, post-1949, Wushu or competitive fighting such as kick boxing .
    By Shanghai Jing Mo

  5. #5
    i was wondering how do you know how to do the moves because hearing the names and stuff doesn't really help me learn the form =\

  6. #6

    Re # 2

    Tong Teen Pao
    Tong teen Keun Faht

    Both meen punching upward towards heaven in essence

    One (Pao) means cannon (Teen) means heaven

    They seem to be a northern stroke southern saying for the same/similar punch in application or usage
    Kune Belay Sau

  7. #7
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    NS,

    The purpose of the lyrics is not to help you learn the forms but to aid you in remembering. The lyrics posted for BSL are a combination of old traditional lyrics i.e., Brave Tiger comes out of Cave, or Hero Single leg to more comtemportary lyrics,i.e., Grabbing arm, straight Punch. Contemportary lyrics are replacement lyrics because the older lyrices are lost and are generally more descriptive in its moves.

    Also lyrics are generally always consistant throughout the style and are not necessary the same to another style.

    What is even more confusing is that some lyrics like Hero Single Leg can be found in several related styles but in other styles the same move will be called something else.

    One can imagine two individuals fighting and their sifus calling out their specific lyrics for their style as the students fight. Each student is listening to the lyrics and struggling, not only trying to figure out their own move, but guessing what his opponent's next techniques is going to be. Makes a good movie huh?

    But seriously, in summary, lyrics are generally specific to certain styles and are only meaningful after one has learned the set and needs only to read the different lyrics to "visualize the set in his head". Obvisously lyrics were a popular method for remembering and was used extentively before the invention of photo, film, video, etc.

    Today lyrics are not that important to today's MA as it was in the past but some of us like to know the lyrics for historical or traditional reasons.

  8. #8
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    NS's doppelganger,

    You can't learn the sets from the poems. There's a lot of interpretation in the lyrics to be done. The same lyric can apply to more than one technique and the same technique can be called different names.

    Edit: beaten by original NS

    Double Edit: I'm actually part way through learning a second interpretation of this set. Wing Lam originally taught me #4 and now I'm learning #4 from Lai Hung. Convenient that this thread popped up when it did. Once I know the whole thing, I might dig this up again and talk about it a bit. In fact, I might try that with #6 later. They are recognizably the same set, but there are key differences in mechanics, expression, and execution that I find interesting, as well as additions to Lai Hung's sets. Wing Lam's BSL comes from YSW, whereas Lai Hung's come from YSW's classmate Lung Tze Hsiang, so we're closely related.
    Last edited by Ravenshaw; 11-08-2006 at 05:47 PM.

  9. #9
    oh ok thanks i was wondering about this becaues i see some people reading these lyrics as they do their forms

  10. #10
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    The study of kung fu lyrics

    I'd say that the study of lyrics is intermediate to advanced for non-Chinese speakers, but beginning for Chinese speakers. When you learn in Chinese, you often learn these poetic names of the movements as you learn the form. Some non-Chinese speakers never even engage the lyrics.

    Herein lies a classic example of the cultural gap of CMA. There's actually a lot of information in the lyrics. Chinese is an immensily dense language, poetic to the core, so many of the lyrics are pregnant with information about how to deliver a move. It can be a fascinating study, since some of the lyrics are really deep. Of course, some aren't deep - some are just like 'right punch, left kick' and that's all. But occasionally, you can unlock something with a lyric.

    I remember doing some lyric translation with a young student and Sifu Wing Lam once. We hit this phrase that literally said 'strike to the yin'. The young student, being somewhat brash, interpreted this to mean 'strike to the groin'. We played the move as a strike to the throat. He changed his interpretation of the form to accomodate the lyrics, so while everyone else was doing throat strikes, he did a groin strike. Sifu was amused but didn't comment. I picked at it like a scab - such is my nature. Sifu said yin could be interpreted here as shadow, or more specifically, any part of the anatomy that was in shadow under the noonday sun, ie. eyes, throat, armpits, groin. These were choice targets - the soft and tenders. The student just took one interpretation and it threw him off track. By picking at it, I uncovered some fresh new skin - a whole new way to look at targets - a kung fu way. That's just one thing I've learned from lyric translation. Here's another.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
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    Sil Lum #4

    Sihing Kevin Lee demonstrates some of his Bak Sil Lum for me

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gvsoqXgW75I
    Robert James
    5th Gen. Bak Hsing Kwoon
    bakhsingkwoon@gmail.com
    http://www.youtube.com/user/SatoriScience
    "Whip the pole like the dragon whips its tail. Punches are like a tiger sticking out its head!"

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