We are now studying Bassai-dai in our Saturday classes.
This kata is very old and versions of it are practiced by people in various styles of Karate. Older versions may go by the name ‘Patsai” and the -dai suffix was added when a secondary version (-sho) was created a little over 100 years ago. More on the history can be found here and here.
You can see very good examples of people from the JKA doing the kata here and here (longer version of Osaka Sensei, including slow-motion, here).
Along with the last three kata (Jion, Jiin and Jitte) that we have been doing in these classes, Bassai-dai is a kata normally introduced at brown belt level. Many of the movements in Bassai-dai should be familiar to students below brown belt, as this is one of the kata from which movements and strategies were taken when the Heian kata were created about 100 years ago as introductions to these more advanced kata.
Even if we’re beyond the kata you’re presently focusing on, it’s great to begin to learn how techniques can be combined, and the practice in applying techniques can be very valuable to your development in Karate.
At SVSK our Saturday morning kata classes focus on one kata at a time. We typically spend four Saturdays on each kata:
Week 1: Overview/review of the kata
Week 2: Fine points of the techniques and the kata
Week 3: Hands-on practice to understand applications (bunkai)
Week 4: Variations in the kata