Luke Jermay Lecture: 21/1/2004
Allegedly Luke Jermay, is still just a young guy of 18. I say allegedly because he seems to have knowledge, experience and sheer balls well beyond his years. For those that don’t know (and shame on you) he is an up and coming mentalist with some truly ground breaking insights into the psychology behind his chosen field.
He uses a mixture of psychology, language, NPL, suggestion, body language and even to some extent hypnosis techniques to not just achieve the many various types of mentalism, but to actually make you believe that maybe he can do these things…
I felt privileged to be at the lecture last night, especially and I was in very good company. Just quickly looking around I noticed Nicholas Einhorn, Martin Cox, Mike Austin, Jamie Badman and Colin Miller (The Underground Collective) and our very own contributor Liam Montier (to name just a few).
The lecture was a mixture of routines followed not so much by explanations, but more the psychology, insights and subtleties behind the effect. I don’t think Luke will mind when I say that not everything went 100% to plan, although I don’t think this was necessarily a bad thing. It certainly didn’t seem to phase Luke in the slightest, he just used the experience to highlight specific points about the effect and the best ways to go about achieving it.
One of the points that is very evident about “mentalism magic” is that it isn’t in the self working easy to do category. There may not be any difficult sleights to learn but you do need a lot of balls and self confidence to carry it off properly. Many complaints I have heard about “Building Blocks” and indeed his earlier book “7 Deceptions” were that it was all theory and wouldn’t work in the real world. Well watching Luke in Action would appear to disprove the critics.
There may be some people who were disappointed that there weren’t more routines shown (not that I actually met anyone that said so). Personally I would strongly disagree with them, as the main reason I was there was to hear Luke speak about what he knows best. I thought that there was a good mix of discussion and routines.
I have to confess that before the lecture I didn’t own “Building Blocks”, but after seeing Luke, and hearing him speak I bought a copy as it would now be inconceivable for me not to read every single word he has so far written. If anyone has any interest what so ever in the “art” of mentalism, then I strongly urge them to do the same.
Because I hadn’t pre-read the book, all the routines he showed were new to me, and of course this meant that I was seeing it from a slightly different perspective than many.
He started off with a routine where he got an audience member on stage, sat them down, and asked them to close their eyes as they merely thought of a card. After a few moments of consideration (and the silent moments are so important), he delved into a deck of cards that were sitting on the table and removed one. He showed this card to the audience, and then asked the spectator to name the card that they were thinking of. Un ‘kin believable! Forget the Breakthrough Card System. Forget the ID. Luke was using no props.
He then repeated this with another card before asking another audience member to pull out any one card from the tabled deck. This WAS the next card that the spectator had been thinking of.
Another routine that Luke demonstrated, and admittedly it could have gone a lot better (and this was purely very bad luck on Lukes part), was his “Magic Castle” effect. Although it went a little astray, for me this has a heck of a lot of potential, and is something that I am definitely going to at least try.
Basically there is a "Magic Card Castle" already built on a side table. A member of the audience is nominated as the "Castle Monitor", whose job it is to knock the castle down at any point of the performance.
When the castle is knocked down, the performer turns his back and says he is going to try an experiment with “Remote Viewing”. He asks the spectator that knocked the cards down, to spread them out on the table so that he can see them all.
He then asks the spectator to count the face up cards – and is visibly seen to be counting himself. Of course he gets it right. In a similar fashion to "Pre-Deck Ability" he then counts the red cards, the diamonds, and even spots when the spectator focuses on a particular card and names that one card.
Although this didn’t go to plan last night, it is actually probably one of the easier more reliable tricks to do, and so very effective. If you wish to see Luke performing a similar version of this, I believe he will be soon doing it on a BBC TV program. I’ll give you more details when I have them.
To summarise, "Building Blocks" is a very aptly named book, as Luke pointed out that all the techniques discussed are merely the building blocks to providing a good mentalist act. It's then a matter of applying all these blocks together to build some impressive routines.
Last nights lecture has provided me with an awful lot of food for thought, and I can hardly wait to start reading the book, at which point I am sure I will have a 1000 new questions to ask him.
In many ways what Luke was actually teaching was how to do mentalist magic without any props. No gaffed decks. Just mind reading.
And that truly is magic.
Review of Building Blocks
Alakazam should have a new batch of Building Blocks on sale.