Differences between Yang and Tung
Differences between Yang and Tung
I am wondering if Tai Chi from Tung Ying Chieh is still considered Yang style by the Yang family or is it considered Dong style?
My reason for this question is that my teacher was a student of Tung Ying Chieh and my teacher has always called it Yang Style. But after recently watching a few DVDs of Yang Style, as done by the Yang Family I have seen several differences.
My reason for this question is that my teacher was a student of Tung Ying Chieh and my teacher has always called it Yang Style. But after recently watching a few DVDs of Yang Style, as done by the Yang Family I have seen several differences.
As far as I understand it, the Yangs do not "police" what is and what is not Yang Style, they simply teach their understanding. They also recognize that the family has taught many disciples and many students and has changed aspects of the teaching over the years. As a result, variation is to be expected.
As I also understand it, the concept of Tai Chi styles is also relatively new. Yang Style Taijiquan originally simply referred to the Taijiquan taught by the Yang family. Indeed, one Chinese word for family (jia1) is also frequently used to refer to different "schools" of thought. As other families have modified the art and begun to look to themselves for standards, rather than to the Yangs, it only makes sense to associate that family's name to their teaching. Whether a new "style" is formed can be simply a matter of opinion with little substance behind it.
I do not know that much about the Tungs' Taijiquan, but the little I know seems to make it by far closer in spirit to what I have learnt in the Association than to some other versions of Taijiquan that people have no problem calling "Yang Style."
Names can be important, but then again, what's really in a name?
Take care,
Audi
As I also understand it, the concept of Tai Chi styles is also relatively new. Yang Style Taijiquan originally simply referred to the Taijiquan taught by the Yang family. Indeed, one Chinese word for family (jia1) is also frequently used to refer to different "schools" of thought. As other families have modified the art and begun to look to themselves for standards, rather than to the Yangs, it only makes sense to associate that family's name to their teaching. Whether a new "style" is formed can be simply a matter of opinion with little substance behind it.
I do not know that much about the Tungs' Taijiquan, but the little I know seems to make it by far closer in spirit to what I have learnt in the Association than to some other versions of Taijiquan that people have no problem calling "Yang Style."
Names can be important, but then again, what's really in a name?
Take care,
Audi
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Greetings all,
For what its worth, I was looking up something on the Chinese Wikipedia and happened to see references to "Dong Style" with only a brief reference to its tranmission in Honk Kong.
To be precise, the vast majority of references to Taijiquan "styles," seemed to be phrased as something that could be interpreted as "Taijiquan (associated with those of the) Yang/Chen/Dong Surname." I can surmise that the Chinese is not as forceful as English in implying that there is a necessary difference between styles.
By the way, I once read that at least one of the Dong's used or uses a bow stance that was narrower than shoulder width. Can anyone comment on this?
Take care,
Audi
For what its worth, I was looking up something on the Chinese Wikipedia and happened to see references to "Dong Style" with only a brief reference to its tranmission in Honk Kong.
To be precise, the vast majority of references to Taijiquan "styles," seemed to be phrased as something that could be interpreted as "Taijiquan (associated with those of the) Yang/Chen/Dong Surname." I can surmise that the Chinese is not as forceful as English in implying that there is a necessary difference between styles.
By the way, I once read that at least one of the Dong's used or uses a bow stance that was narrower than shoulder width. Can anyone comment on this?
As I understand it, there are/were also several differences in the way Yang Zhenji, Yang Zhenduo, and Fu Zhongwen do/did the form. I don't know if the Dong's show the same degree of variation, but variation is not necessarily a big deal.<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">But after recently watching a few DVDs of Yang Style, as done by the Yang Family I have seen several differences.</font>
Take care,
Audi
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I don't understand why so many people get hung up on form variations. It's been that way since the very beginning. Everyone of YCF's sons does it differently (even Sau Chung added a few of his own movements) from each other, just like YCF himself eventually did it differently.
POTATOE > POTATO > it's all still starch!!
POTATOE > POTATO > it's all still starch!!
Hm.. I've actually never heard of Dong style Tai Chi. I only know of the Chen, Yang, Sun, Wu and Wu3 styles. Is it similar in flow and form to the Yang style?
Any site I can get more info on it?
Thanks.
Best Regards
Marcus
Tai Chi Master Reveals 5 Steps System To Peak Physical And Mental Health...In Just 7 Days!
Any site I can get more info on it?
Thanks.
Best Regards
Marcus
Tai Chi Master Reveals 5 Steps System To Peak Physical And Mental Health...In Just 7 Days!
Dong Tai Chi
http://www.dongtaichi.com/
Dong is not recoganized by the PRC but there is another form recognized by the PRC Zhaobao which is very much like Chen.
I have been looking into this a little more since my original post and it appears that the slow form taught by Tung Ying Cheih’s great grandson Alex is very similar to traditional Yang style a few postures are slightly different and a few of the repeat postures have been removed and in some places more obvious Fajing. My teacher was a student of Tung Ying Cheih and my form falls somewhere in between.
The biggest difference I see so far is in the fast form. The Dong fast form is very different than the Yang fast form. I have been trained in the Yang fast form by my Sifu but not the Dong fast form, which he does know. But from what I have seen of the Dong fast form I like it.
http://www.dongtaichi.com/
Dong is not recoganized by the PRC but there is another form recognized by the PRC Zhaobao which is very much like Chen.
I have been looking into this a little more since my original post and it appears that the slow form taught by Tung Ying Cheih’s great grandson Alex is very similar to traditional Yang style a few postures are slightly different and a few of the repeat postures have been removed and in some places more obvious Fajing. My teacher was a student of Tung Ying Cheih and my form falls somewhere in between.
The biggest difference I see so far is in the fast form. The Dong fast form is very different than the Yang fast form. I have been trained in the Yang fast form by my Sifu but not the Dong fast form, which he does know. But from what I have seen of the Dong fast form I like it.
Additionally, if this helps.
Tung Ying Chieh is where Dong style comes from and I found these
Tung Ying Chieh
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8ydIbWD_sQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ny9biV4DQmo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuWaVcWgHdc
Tung Ying Chieh is where Dong style comes from and I found these
Tung Ying Chieh
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8ydIbWD_sQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ny9biV4DQmo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuWaVcWgHdc
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As I have come to suspect it would be since my original post.
I guess as far as he long form is concerned I can say, if I wanted, I do Yang style as taught by Tung Ying Chieh. However I know the fast forms are very different between the families. But I am at a loss as to the differences, if any, in the weapons forms. I was taught by my teacher who was taught by Sifu Tung, who was trained in both Yang and Hao style, and I have not seen any one do the Yang style weapons forms as they directly come from the Yang family. What I do could be exactly the same or completely different, I don't know.
My teacher knows both fast forms, Yang and Tung, which he learned from Sifu Tung and the fast form that I was taught was the Yang family fast form not the fast form of Sifu Tung so that leads me to not being quite sure of the weapons forms. And now that I think of it, I am not sure of what Traditional Yang family push hands are like either. I may or may not be doing the same thing, I’m not sure.
I guess as far as he long form is concerned I can say, if I wanted, I do Yang style as taught by Tung Ying Chieh. However I know the fast forms are very different between the families. But I am at a loss as to the differences, if any, in the weapons forms. I was taught by my teacher who was taught by Sifu Tung, who was trained in both Yang and Hao style, and I have not seen any one do the Yang style weapons forms as they directly come from the Yang family. What I do could be exactly the same or completely different, I don't know.
My teacher knows both fast forms, Yang and Tung, which he learned from Sifu Tung and the fast form that I was taught was the Yang family fast form not the fast form of Sifu Tung so that leads me to not being quite sure of the weapons forms. And now that I think of it, I am not sure of what Traditional Yang family push hands are like either. I may or may not be doing the same thing, I’m not sure.
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T,
Drop on over to the Yang Shou Zhong Video discussion and follow the link there to watch his form. You'll see very much the same form being done.
This appears to me to be a Yang family style form, similar to what is being taught by Master Yang Jun. It's differences are much less than it's similarities and really are only differences in terms of window dressing, not substance.
I wouldn't worry too terribly much about your weapons forms. If they are "different" it will again only be in terms of how it's dressed up, not in its principles.
Bob
Drop on over to the Yang Shou Zhong Video discussion and follow the link there to watch his form. You'll see very much the same form being done.
This appears to me to be a Yang family style form, similar to what is being taught by Master Yang Jun. It's differences are much less than it's similarities and really are only differences in terms of window dressing, not substance.
I wouldn't worry too terribly much about your weapons forms. If they are "different" it will again only be in terms of how it's dressed up, not in its principles.
Bob
Thank You, I see what you mean, they look very similar.
The reason I am trying to figure out where the weapons forms come from has more to do with where I will go to continue my training, Dong family or Yang Family. I have 9 good years and 3 not so good with my Sifu and to continue moving forward it has become necessary to move on.
Thank You Again.
The reason I am trying to figure out where the weapons forms come from has more to do with where I will go to continue my training, Dong family or Yang Family. I have 9 good years and 3 not so good with my Sifu and to continue moving forward it has become necessary to move on.
Thank You Again.
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T,
Whatever decision you make, you will be getting quality TCC training. That's what's important from that aspect.
For what it's worth, three bad years, for whatever reason, is not a good thing in my opinion regardless of how many years were good previous to that.
I've experienced having a teacher who seemed good at first, then later on turned out not to be. So I can totally identify with your situation.
If it's time to move on, then move on and don't look back. Take with you what is important and relevant and leave the rest behind.
The Yang family will be able to take you as far as you'd like with your training, regardless of what you've learned in the past, as long as you are willing to leave it there, in the past, and be willing to move on to the future.
It took me a long time to figure that out, but now that I have let the past go and am moving forward, I am making leaps and bounds in my understanding every day.
Bob
Whatever decision you make, you will be getting quality TCC training. That's what's important from that aspect.
For what it's worth, three bad years, for whatever reason, is not a good thing in my opinion regardless of how many years were good previous to that.
I've experienced having a teacher who seemed good at first, then later on turned out not to be. So I can totally identify with your situation.
If it's time to move on, then move on and don't look back. Take with you what is important and relevant and leave the rest behind.
The Yang family will be able to take you as far as you'd like with your training, regardless of what you've learned in the past, as long as you are willing to leave it there, in the past, and be willing to move on to the future.
It took me a long time to figure that out, but now that I have let the past go and am moving forward, I am making leaps and bounds in my understanding every day.
Bob