xiongnu_luohan
White Belt
I think some styles are hard to classify in terms of northern vs. southern.
I've never done CLF but I know it's techinically a southern style. But to me it seems more northern in flavor. I say this because of the stances that look northern to me. Also there are lots of flying kicks including tornado kicks etc. From what I know of CLF there was some exchange of students between one prominent CLF teacher and gu ruzhang(ku yu cheong) back in the day. They are different arts but yet CLF does seem to use all of those northern kicking elements.
I actually think the same about Jow Ga. From what I know Jow Ga originated with an overseas chinese monk( living in indonesia ). But one of the major roots of the style was northern shaolin. Jow Ga seems to also have a lot of tiger stuff but then again isn't there a shandong(shantung) black tiger style out there? Anyway to me it looks like Jow Ga has a northern foundation as well.
Then there are styles from the middle( shanghai region ) that to me also look northern. In particular my jhong law horn looks very northern to me, not just that the horse stance( ma bu ) has a northern flavor but the way they use the jin(jing) seems so relaxed and fluid that it reminds me of northern boxing.
Then of course we have the western styles like tibetan & emei(omei) styles. I actually know very little about these styles but I've heard they are hard to classify because they have a few long-armed hand sets as well.
No disrespect intended toward any cma or anything mentioned here. I really admire CLF, Jow Ga, and MJLH. I've never done those styles but I'm a big fan of all 3.
I guess it just frustrates me because the way we sometimes think about northern vs. southern isn't all that useful IMO. There are so many exceptions and as I've mentioned even styles that everyone sees as southern can still have a northern-type hand set in their curriculum. I guess the 'butterfly palms' set in hung ga would be an example of this.
I've never done CLF but I know it's techinically a southern style. But to me it seems more northern in flavor. I say this because of the stances that look northern to me. Also there are lots of flying kicks including tornado kicks etc. From what I know of CLF there was some exchange of students between one prominent CLF teacher and gu ruzhang(ku yu cheong) back in the day. They are different arts but yet CLF does seem to use all of those northern kicking elements.
I actually think the same about Jow Ga. From what I know Jow Ga originated with an overseas chinese monk( living in indonesia ). But one of the major roots of the style was northern shaolin. Jow Ga seems to also have a lot of tiger stuff but then again isn't there a shandong(shantung) black tiger style out there? Anyway to me it looks like Jow Ga has a northern foundation as well.
Then there are styles from the middle( shanghai region ) that to me also look northern. In particular my jhong law horn looks very northern to me, not just that the horse stance( ma bu ) has a northern flavor but the way they use the jin(jing) seems so relaxed and fluid that it reminds me of northern boxing.
Then of course we have the western styles like tibetan & emei(omei) styles. I actually know very little about these styles but I've heard they are hard to classify because they have a few long-armed hand sets as well.
No disrespect intended toward any cma or anything mentioned here. I really admire CLF, Jow Ga, and MJLH. I've never done those styles but I'm a big fan of all 3.
I guess it just frustrates me because the way we sometimes think about northern vs. southern isn't all that useful IMO. There are so many exceptions and as I've mentioned even styles that everyone sees as southern can still have a northern-type hand set in their curriculum. I guess the 'butterfly palms' set in hung ga would be an example of this.