Desert Island Tricks
Your magic can be technically flawless and still feel forgettable. This conversation with Michael Vincent hit us like a wake-up call: the real goal is the experience you leave with the spectator, not the applause for your hands. Michael opens up about stepping away from performing to care for his mother, then returning with a new approach built around purpose, discipline, and audiences who choose to be there. The list becomes a deep dive into close-up magic and parlour magic fundamentals: Vernon’s Triumph as chaos versus order with the spectator doing the shuffling, Linking Rings built on crystal-clear conditions, Slydini’s Knotted Silks as pure visual impossibility, the Invisible Deck as shared fantasy made real, Roy Walton’s Smiling Mule as a lesson in timing, plus coin magic that leans on sound, story, and imagination. We also go hard on a topic many magicians avoid: reading and research. Michael argues that the best secrets still live in books, that mastery can’t be bought and that a strong repertoire is a reflection of identity. He caps it with two recommendations that shape creative showmanship and resilience: Darwin Ortiz’s Strong Magic and Viktor Frankl’s A Man’s Search For Meaning. If you want stronger reactions, better structure, and a more honest path to becoming great, press play, then subscribe, share this with a magician friend and leave a review with your own desert island list. Michael Vincent’s Desert Island Tricks Care Package: Triumph 1. Linking Rings 2. Knotted Silks 3. Invisible Deck 4. Smiling Mule 5. Coins Through Hand 6. The Slot Machine 7. Marlo’s Repeat Card to Pocket 8. Your Card, My Card, Everybody’s Card Banishment. Complete and utter laziness Book. Strong Magic Item. A Man’s Search for Meaning Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
148 episodios
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