Drumming up more customers
Young Chang
Karate experts blocked out the din of the Lab Antimall Saturday
afternoon and focused on performing their craft.
The shoppers at Urban Outfitters, the diners at the Gypsy Den, not
even the thunderous drumming of the Taiko performers should break their
concentration, said Andy Ortega, chief instructor at the Santa Ana
location of United Studios of Self Defense.
“The students are trained to perform with distractions. It helps us to
focus,” Ortega said.
A team of eight from United Studios locations in Santa Ana, Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa were accompanied by seven Taiko drummers from the
Taiko Center of Los Angeles for the Antimall’s Day of Arts and Culture.
The karate experts performed everything from fight scenes to breathing
techniques while a crowd of afternoon shoppers grew.
Behind them, Taiko drummers performed a style of Japanese folk
drumming that sounded appropriately aggressive alongside black-belted
pundits kicking and jumping.
The drummers stood with their feet apart as if to attack the drum and
yelled mono-syllabic sounds similar to what the karate experts were
screaming to release energy.
“We use chi energy,” said Tom Kurai, director of the Taiko Center.
“It’s not physical, but we use energy from the diaphragm.”
In Asian cultures, chi is a form of internal energy that can be
channeled through breathing and used to help with everything from healing
to strengthening the body.
Kurai, who is also a priest at the Sozenji Buddhist Temple in
Montebello where the Taiko Center is headquartered, said the drums are
universal instruments that can be used for cultural, musical and
religious purposes.
“It’s kind of like martial arts, but creating music,” he said.
Julie Shumaker, marketing director of the Antimall, said the center
hosts regular outdoor shows including live concerts, fashion shows, bingo
games and Earth Day celebrations.
“We were looking for a unique day of arts and culture, experiencing
something we haven’t before,” she said.
-- Young Chang writes features. She may be reached at (949) 574-4268
or by e-mail at o7 young.chang@latimes.comf7 .
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