If you read that a magic tricks difficulty level is easy, don’t fall into the trap this guy did..
On the whole I hate magic forums. If I didn’t have to post on them as part of my job, I’d avoid them. Why?.. Because usually they are just a place where great magic tricks go to die.
Don’t get me wrong, the magic community is a great asset for magicians, and sharing ideas can really help. But there is just so much bad advice on most threads when it comes to performing.
I can live with the ego’s, pent up resentment, lost ambition, and armchair experts. I just get mad when beginners read advice from other beginners, that is plainly wrong and could set their magic practice backwards.
Here’s just such a comment I read on a popular forum:
XXXXX writes: ‘Difficulty: Easy: That to me states no practice required.‘
XXXXX is a regular customer of MoM, so I was pretty surprised to read this comment. I know that he likes to ‘troll’ on the reviews section of forums, playing the popular game ‘expose a tricks secret through 20 questions’, or posting comments designed only to annoy. I assumed the post was probably just there to wind people up, but a real beginner might actually think this guy (with a lot of previous posts) knows what he is talking about..
Just so YOU don’t come across that post and take it seriously. Here’s what he could have written:
Difficulty Easy: That means the mechanics of the trick are easy to learn, or that the props are easy to operate.
I’m sure you can probably word it better than that. So perhaps leave a comment in the section below. Anyway, the point is that ‘EASY’ DOES NOT MEAN YOU CAN SKIP PRACTICE..
Luckily a magician quickly replied on the forum thread: ‘If you want novelty gags then that’s a different thing. Magic takes practice.‘
Without sufficient practice you will, at best, give an ‘average magicians performance’. YOU are better than that..
If a magic trick is described by a magic shop as easy. It’s to help magicians that need to choose tricks that are not complex, dependent on sleight of hand, or assume advanced dexterity or misdirection/audience control skills. That does make them a great fit for beginners, but it doesn’t refer to practice at all.
Never attempt to perform a trick to the public on the day you learn it. I urge you to practice the method and get comfortable & confident as you turn the trick into a solid routine over time. You must drill, and rehearse every trick, it’s presentation, timing, context within your act, meaning within your performing persona, etc etc.
This takes time and effort. If you would like more information on this. Please read this free copy of the book Approaching Magic Practice.
I couldn’t agree more, it doesn’t have to be a ‘difficult’ trick to be good. It’s all down to the performer and performance. I open with a ‘self working’ trick, but this allows me to concentrate on selling me and my ability to entertain, once you’ve won them over it doesn’t matter how difficult the trick is – practice makes perfect – Regardless!