Sharing Your Experiences With Magic

Kinkaku-Ji

Kinkaku-Ji in Kyoto

Magic like all art forms is about sharing feelings, and experience. However, I see very few magicians sharing their experiences through magic. I have seen many that use canned experiences to fit a certain effect but I am talking about sharing real experiences you have had. You often see comedians telling funny stories about themselves, and as well hears songs whose writers write about their experiences. I believe that magic is the perfect medium to share your real life experiences because you can create the same feeling you had with your experience in the audience by the effect you perform that relates to your experience. Not only does this give your magic meaning it makes the magic truly yours. I try when I can to do this with my own magic. Here in Japan I try to talk about my life in Canada, as well as what it is like for me to live in Japan as a Canadian. I use my magic to relate to my audiences my experiences living in Japan both good and bad and how I over came them. This is a great way to come up with routines. So the next time you are stuck working on a new effect or routine try to draw form you own life experiences, you may just find the creative pool you were looking for.

Aaron

Creating Feeling In Your Magic

 Shirakawa-Go Japan

Shirakawa-Go Japan

Today I wanted o write about creating feeling in your magic and how I do it. For me having some kind of emotional feeling in the magic is very important, both for the impact of the effect and for the theatrical value. The difficult thing is how to create this feeling in you magic and where to draw the emotion from. As most artists, I pull my feeling from my real life experiences. But how to you do this? Well I am going to explain one example of how I do it.

The picture in the blog  post is from Shirakawa-Go which is a World Heritage Site located in Gifu Prefecture in Japan. I went to visit it in November of 2006.  What a beautiful place! It’s a place from the past that is protected for us to see now. When I went here what a feeling of wonder I got. It is located in the mountains and is a very peaceful place. To be here and imagine what life was like here 100 year ago or more is just amazing. It is one of many places I have visited that have given me a interesting feeling of real magic. To visit a place like this is magic. This is one of the reasons I love Japan and there are many more places in Japan like this I want to visit.

Anyways back to my topic of creating feeling for magic. Ok the feeling I got from visiting this place is a feeling that I want to share. And what better way than to express the feeling through my magic. So how can you do this? Well this is how I do it. First I think about the feeling I had and how can I express it in words. What adjectives can I use to express how I felt. Second, I listen to music and find some music that has gives me a similar feeling and listen to the words of the music how things are described. Next I write down my descriptions. Next I brain storm some magical effects and think about how the effect alone makes me feel. I then start to play with the magic and just talk trying to use the words I used to describe my thoughts on the place I visited. During this process I slowly come up with a story for a presentation that starts to hold the feelings I want to express.  I just think and play and write down the ideas that come. It is like an organized brain storming session. This creates the seed to the routine I will work on and refine that will try to express the feeling I want. Of course this works for emotions and feelings you have from other life situations as well. This idea is all a little esoteric but you have to let go and really not be scared and just go with comes to you when you are doing the brainstorming with the effects and your feelings. I often just talk to myself like I am doing a show ad lib. This really helps and gets my brain moving.

This idea is a bit esoteric as I mentioned but it is how I do it. I hope it makes a bit of sense for you and I hope you can take something from it to use to apply feeling to your magic. If you have an interesting way that you use for adding feeling please let me know!

Aaron

My Ramblings On Performing Your Magic Show

Doing A Show

Doing A Show

Doing magic is great fun. I remember when I was young and started to do music I  just could not get a enough of showing tricks to my teachers and friends. When I was around 16 or so I   started to get more serious about my magic. I had been doing shows since I was about 12 but it was nothing more than a cute  little kid doing magic. When I was 15, 16 years old the cute  kid doing  magic novelty was loner there. This is when I started to seriously work on my magic as a show. Both my close-up and my stage magic. I improved my close-up abilities and got more interested in performing rather than doing tricks as a cute kid.

Once I started to form my real performing style I had to perform it. So I worked hard to book shows and received shows from my other magic friends as well as from my mentor Tony Eng. But the good thing and the reason for this long winded blog is I had to perform the show that I created. After each show I could evaluate and find out what worked and what needed to be changed. I have records from almost every show I have done since I was 16. That has given me a large set of data of routines that I tried and soon scrapped and ones I have kept for almost 20 years. But If I never changed my attitude when I was 16 and created a proper show and went out to perform I would have never become a better magician and have learned to create a good show. So the point of this blog is create your show then go perform it and make sure it is not just a string of random tricks and take notes after that show of what you did and what worked. Be honest to yourself. If a trick you loved totally failed to more than 2 audiences trash it, or leave it out and wait and reworked it for another time in the future.

OK I think I rambled enough today! Any comments let me know!
Aaron

Have Fun With Magic!

Having Fun At Vancouver Weekend of Magic 2000

Having Fun At Vancouver Weekend of Magic 2000

The picture to the left here is from when I went to the Vancouver Magic Weekend in 2005.  It is one of the pictures I rescued from my old drive last week. As you can see in the picture I was having fun. I forget what event this was I was performing for I don’t think it was the stage show. This picture reminded me how fun magic can be to perform. And this is very important that we do have fun when we perform magic. Most all of us start magic because it is fun, but when you start to do it full time you can forget the fun parts, while working on the business and other aspects of making a living in magic. If you are new to magic have FUN doing it. When we as performers enjoy doing the magic OUR audiences are sure to enjoy the magic as well. Let your personality shine through when you perform. Have fun with the magic effects and have fun with the people whom your performing for. Enjoy your magic! It it something I try not to forget, but I really enjoy performing for both small and large audiences.

I have an interesting war story about being at this Vancouver weekend of Magic in 2000. I was asked a few months before it to perform in the close-up show. So I worked on my close-up routine for the weekend.  However when I arrived to the mini convention from Victoria I found out I was now scheduled to perform at the stage show.  However, I didn’t bring any of my stage stuff. But thanks to my friends Shawn Farquhar and Graeme Kingston I was able to perform. Shawn let me use his Jumbo Sidekick and Lori agreed to be my assistant and Graeme lent me his straight jacket. The straight jacket is a regular part of my act, however I have never used a Jumbo Sidekick before.  So on that day Shawn walked me through how to perform Jumbo Side kick and I worked on a routine for it. Now I don’t condone performing an effect on the day you learn it but this day I did. The only reason I could kind of pull it off is from my performing experience and the help of my friends. The show went fine with no problems and I was so nervous when I performed Jumbo Sidekick. But thanks to good magic friends I was able to pull off an fun performance. I’ll never forget them for their great help that day. So one good thing make lots of good friends with your fellow magicians because you never know when you will need their help or they will need yours.

PS If anyone has a video of my performance that that Weekend Of Magic Please let me know!

That is enough of my rambling for today but if you have any comments please post them!
Aaron