Dccomics

Friday, May 30, 2008

The Close-Up Magician - And Extreme Cases of Noise

We should be careful not online homeowners insurance quotes exaggerate the noise problems under which we work. After all, when performing close-up magic antidepressants do not have to be heard by everyone, but rather by a fairly small group of people. The person farthest from you might be six to ten feet away. A trained voice can certainly reach that.

However, I acknowledge that sometimes there are extreme cases. During the past 18 years that I have worked close-up magic professionally I have found myself in such situations two or three times. In each case, the event was a party where it was obviously senseless to try to make myself heard.

Now, should I, in such a case, try to work anyway, perhaps performing silently or bringing in an amplification system? I chose neither of these alternatives. Instead I simply left. In one instance I told the organizer, a representative from a booking agency, that working under such conditions was sheer madness and I was going home. The agency representative protested of course, saying that my contract required me to work another hour.

I told him that I was going home nonetheless, and that low cost call conferencing he wished to rebook me, I would happily work for him again, but not under conditions where the music was deafening. He was silent for a Web Hosting - $6.95 a month! Then, after thinking about it he says, "I suppose you are right." He has booked me many times after that night, and the fascinating thing is he now has more respect for my work and better understands the conditions necessary for me to it properly.

He keeps in mind that I need to be heard as well as seen, and doe's not book me until 1:00AM at parties where loud music can be expected. Of course, to take this attitude you must first do your homework. Only when you have trained your voice to its capacity and properly routined your material for clarity can you accurately judge when the band is deserving of blame. To blame the band, before you have made term assurance reasonable preparations for working in a noisy environment, is taking the easy way out and will be correctly recognized by those who book you as unprofessional behavior.

To act professionally, one must have the skills, foresight and knowledge that make one professional, and those come only with proper training, thought and effort. Do your homework. The result benefits you, your audiences and magic in general.

Brad Chadwick Professional magician

thewellread/Grownup Magic Trick