by SamGurney » Mar 31st, '10, 02:47
I understand completley Mark, that is this new generation of magic emerging which concentrates on what's new. There is a magic hobbyist who I know around similar age to me, and he talks to me about loads of magicians who I have NEVER heard of. Occasionally we strike a name who we are both familiar and he tells me 'I don't know anything modern' and I tell him 'You don't know anything old'. I think those are the situations where it is a bad thing. You need to have a solid base in order to progress and that is what I am saying- the old material has tonnes of great material and has to be learned and studied, but equally, progression and evolution is what magic, and indeed any craft revolves around. I may have said before, but there are a good few tricks in my repertoire which I have been performing scince maybe even before I started out in magic. Out of this world being an example, I perform it regularly and I think it would be a disservice to magic if I just left it. I am always thinking of different ways of doing it, different touches and playing with more 'modern' methods of doing it, different presentational devices and different ways of presenting it. Obviously it has it's roots in the past but the modern touches progress it- the two are important parts of the equation. Yes, you could argue it was a great effect to start with, but what would the world be like today if Einstein had said 'Newton is already good enough' which, to be fair, it was (and also a lot simpler) but still, Einstein's work was built... coincidentally, on the shoulders of giants like Newton. We cannot sustain magic with this culture of only caring about 'what's new?' and that is not what I am advocating, but we can only survive or improve, as with everything, with progression and developement. Both presentationally and methodologically. But Equally, the roots of progression are lodged in the dusty old, and great books of the past.
I hope I have not gone into this TOO deeply, and apologise, just letting out some thoughts.
''To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in another's.'' Dostoevsky's Razumihin.