by Phillip
Starr
Many
moons ago, the founder of Kyokushin karate, Masutatsu Oyama, remarked
on the types of people who are able to achieve skill in karate rather
quickly. He included musicians (and secondarily, those who love to
listen to music) in his rather short list. It was some time before I
figured out why. To
become a skilled musician, you must acquire an understanding of
rhythms; you must understand half-beats and even quarter-beats... and
the same is true of those wishing to become skilled in the martial
arts. For someone who is unfamiliar with the (musical) concept of
rhythms, the idea of striking an enemy in a half-beat seems quite
foreign. It is no coincidence that many of the finest and best-known
warriors of times past had a genuine appreciation of music and more
than a few were accomplished musicians themselves! Inscrutable.
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Consider
that everything in life has rhythm(s). We have the four seasons,
which rise and fall with a certain rhythm (except in southern China
where I lived); it's not unusual to skip Fall and go directly from
Summer to Winter. I guess it's a “skipped beat!”. Your gait has
a certain rhythm. Relationships, health, the life cycle, dancing,
and even painting all have rhythms. And there are rhythms within
rhythms. If you can become finely attuned to your opponent's rhythm,
how can he ever hope to successfully attack you? Were he to make
such an attempt, he would be instantly defeated.

In the
West, we've pretty much adopted the four-beat rhythm in our music.
One noted author believes that this may be largely due to the
rhythmical beat of horse's hooves. On the other hand, he says, most
people in feudal Japan, Okinawa, Korea, and China didn't ride horses.
For one thing, acquiring and keeping a horse was quite expensive.
Another consideration is that of the local roads, which were really
dirt paths of varying sizes. Special passes were often required of
those wishing to ride horses or pull heavy wagons over these trails;
the wheels of too many wagons would result in deep ruts, which would
inhibit foot traffic considerably. And horse's hooves would simply
tear up the smoothed dirt. In the West, travel by wagon or horse was
much more common and I guess they didn't care about ruts (heck, they
didn't even care about cleaning themselves after defecating; it was
the Chinese who introduced the use of “toilet paper” to
Europeans).

The
aforementioned author goes on to say that in the East, musical
“rhythms” were taken from nature; the dripping of water after a
rain, for instance. Thus, the reason for the differences in tempos
between Eastern and Western music. For purposes of gaining a deep
understanding of rhythm, I think it's a good idea to appreciate both
types of music. In my classes, I always played Eastern music,
figuring that my students got their fill of Western music on their
own...

Not all
kata utilize the same rhythm. Each one has its own special rhythms.
Different sections of a given kata employ different rhythms and
unless you know and practice them, you're doing little more than a
sophisticated forms of jumping jacks. You have to study them in
detail because they can change the entire meaning (breakdown) of a
form. The vast majority of martial arts practitioners (and that
includes instructors) are missing this vital element in their kata.
I've even seen a number of world-renowned teachers plopping through
their kata without so much as a whisper of rhythm! So, please make
it a point to learn the various rhythm of your kata and always
include them in your practice.

If you
ask most karate or taekwondo teachers about the purpose of 3-step
fight, most of them will tell you that this familiar exercise, which
confuses beginners and bores advanced students half to death, is
intended primarily to teach the applications of various blocking
techniques. They secondarily teach the application of basic
striking, thrusting, and kicking techniques. This has become the
“traditional” explanation because most people have been doing it
this for generations. When beginners first learn to practice this
form of kumite, it is very useful in teaching them basic applications
of techniques as well as how to properly advance and retreat.
Advanced students, however, rarely practice 3-step fight because they
have acquired a good level of skill in these things.
But.
3-step
fight is also an exercise through which students learn about rhythm;
they learn how to “break” the opponent's rhythm. This is a
crucial aspect of kumite that is often overlooked. A detailed,
illustrated explanation of this is provided in my book, “MARTIAL
MANEUVERS.” If you don't already have a copy, get one!
The
next step is 1-step fight, which not only teaches evasive maneuvers
and the applications of technique, but also a slightly more subtle
(and hence, more difficult) method of learning to feel and respond to
an opponent's rhythm. This is virtually impossible to do unless one
has mastered the methods that are to be learned in 3-step fight.
Only after achieving some appreciable skill in understanding rhythm
via 1-step kumite, should one engage in vigorous jyu-kumite
(freestyle sparring).

The
discerning practitioner will soon discover that “speed”, per se,
isn't nearly as important as being able to detect and respond to the
opponent's rhythm. If you can feel his rhythm, there's no need to
“hurry.” This is how and why aging masters seem to be
extraordinarily fast and able to defeat much younger adversaries with
ease; their ability to feel and react to an opponent's rhythm (their
“timing”) is razor-sharp. Let's face it, no 80 year old,
regardless of how physically fit he may be, is ever going to be
faster than a 25 year old. As the years pass, our speed declines and
there's simply nothing we can do about it. But timing can always be
improved, regardless of age. So when a younger opponent attacks an
older master with great speed and power, the latter responds at the
right instant and this gives the illusion that he is moving at
extremely high speed.

It
takes study, introspection, and LOTS of practice... not just in
martial arts, but in other aspects of daily life, too. And an
understanding of rhythms can lead to a deeper understanding of other
things as well. Now, go back to your first kata and find the rhythm.
It is how your kata speaks to you. Listen to it.