Christopher,
I assure you I am not trying to be obtuse. I and many others in the magic world hold this position.
You suggest again and again that if you change the presentation, it is some how ok.
Is it?
Card to watermelon done to poetry is still card to watermelon when done with proceedural patter. If the audience walks aways thinking they have seen the same trick, you are copying.
Someone asked michael weber at magiccon, how different must a trick be before you can consider it your own? He replied, when the person who 'inspired' your work (either in print or through performance) can no longer recognize their efforts in what you are doing. I know, that a big step to have to make - but is magic better or worse when people don't take that step? (And before you answer, talk to a booking agent about magic acts.)
Every post you have made puts you on a path of making your work more closely resembling that of another magician as opposed to something unique, and artistic, offered by you (hence the teller quote). You seem to suggest you live without resource to other magicians who can help you learn. So I can only assume the magicians you are watching are those on tv and youtube - the same magicians laypeople are likely to see in the first case and perhaps will see in the other. By choosing your material from the buffet that has already been served by others, can you not see how you are offering nothing new - only derivative shadows of the original flavors already tasted by your audience when prepared for them by other chefs ... Does it matter if you put green food coloring into the jello instead of red? Will anyone who has seen these others before think of you as something special - or just a guy doing old tricks?
Now, you lament the inability to afford books in order to research tricks that would work well for you. I find this puzzling. Not the money part. But the idea that it is easier to 'see' how something would work well for you from watching someone else do it, as opposed to taking the description in a book a figuring it out HOW to make it work well for you.
You tell us that you plan to put your own spin on things - but why start on a foundation so well spun already? Won't you get to a more unique product by starting with a blanker slate?
Take any book - the 4th volume of tarbell for example. There are hundreds of tricks in there you have probably never heard of - nor have anyone on these boards or anyone you might likely perform for.
Why not spend this time you already are planning to spend personalizing the trick, and do that with one of those?
When you say watching another performer helps you see tricks that might work for you - that just doesn't make sense. Why can't you get that from a book?
If you have the ability to look at someone act and ;change their trick' into something truly different and unique to you, that would not invite comparison to them - then you have the ability to do it from a book. And here's the thing - you will have thousands of more options available to you AND you can be sure that everything you add is YOU. It can be done. You CAN do it. Everyone here can.
But its easier to let someone else do it for us, I guess.
IF YOU READ NOTHING ELSE READ THIS: christopher, As to the exclusive coterie - what do you think would happen if you performed this at a magic convention with well posted magicians present? What about in a show where theatrically savvy people attended? How do you think you would be received? What would they say?
What if you changed part of it - the method or presentation. Would it matter?
do you recall the michael vincent issue regarding the mutliple selections routine? What was said about "his" 'version' of ricky's routine in the magical press?
You seem to be taking a position based on the way you think the world should work - so it makes your life more pleasabt - and not taking into consideration what actually happens.
Finally, draven seems to think that as long as its in print, its fair game. Trick selection is as personal and artistically revealing/important as original methods and presentations. Some magicians spend their lives rediscovering lost and hidden diamonds and shining them to performance perfection.
Why should someone be able to steal this research from them?
Now, I'm not talking about someone who has seen 14 magicians produce bowling balls from note pads, sees the ads for it in the magazine and buys it.
I'm talking about the guy who watched t.c. (I will use his initials as I do not want people pouching his material) perform an exceedingly obscure scotty york or fred kaps trick that we all read yet no one ever bothered to think twice about, and then runs out and is suddenly inspired to start performing it.
How is that good for t.c.? Should we care about a fellow performer who uses this material to put food on his table?
How good is it for magic? Are we better off now that instead of one person doing something truly unique and impossible, we now have two? How is that now either unique or impossible?
How good is it for the copyist? He will now go through life being comparable to another - someone who probably knows more about the trick than the copyist will ever know.
But here's the funny thing - if someone looked up either kaps or york and picked any of the tricks that they haven't seen someone do - spent just a little thought making it their own (which is what, christopher, you say you are going to do anyway) then ALL of these problems disappear like magic.
The question is - do you want to do magic. Do you want to give your audiences something truly unique and special - or do you really just want to copy what you see for your own amusement.
The difference is in looking on the page someone elses work leads you to, or turning to the next and starting there.
Brad
Ps. Email carc. They have a program now where they will give you free membership in exchange for pointing out scan mistakes when you find them.
See - problem solved
