http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGeIuc0wNOg
It makes you realise just how much the Okinawan styles overlap

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Bruise* Lee wrote:I think SHito ryu is oen of the best places to see the overlap. If memory serves me "Shito" is formed by the use of 2 Kanji - one taken from the name of Itosu (Shorin ryu) and one from Hiagaonna (goju ryu or maybe more correctly Naha te). These were the 2 instructors of the guy who founded Shito ryu - can't think of his name off hand. I studied Motobu ha shito ryu from 1975-1980 - this was the first group I was with who was affilated with Juko kai. Juko kai did not do Shito ryu per se, my instructor had been with Siyogo Kuniba and left for the opportunity to train with Sacharnoski - which at the time was worth it.
Any way the founder of Shito ryu combined from the Naha te and Shorin - so you see some forms with dynamic tension. I think Shorin also has Saifa and sieunchin as well.
Kyokushin also had a mixture of shotokan and Goju - so many of the Kyokushin did dynamic tension.