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Eden and Them

A couple of posts ago I wrote about Eden Cheung, Vancouver Busker, local n’er do well and one of the many artists included in a fascinating video adventure: The Busking Project.

They’ve just posted a lovely trailer of sorts that highlights the people they’ve met and the places they’ve visited over the last year or so.

Enjoy.

ps… yes, I will be pilfering their other videos to bolster my post count.

This Happens Every Day from The Busking Project on Vimeo.

Eden + Me!

A couple of weekends ago, my son Hector and I were on Granville Island for an adventure and we heard the distant sound of a whip cracking!

That could only mean one thing: Eden Cheung was performing somewhere nearby.

I’ve known Eden for a few years now, the first encounter was one where he attempted an ESP experiment on me for real. At least, I hope it was for real because it didn’t go well. We had mutual friends and when Wes Barker and I were performing together we ran into him quite often performing his Cups and Balls act. It was pretty good… a lot of Gazzo in style and content with a few original bits and a couple of standard tricks.

Then, late this summer, my buddy Travis returned from his fringe tour and asked me if I had seen Eden lately. I hadn’t. Travis saw Eden several times while they were both touring around and Trav was blown away with how Eden’s show had progressed. Somehow, over the last eight or so months, Eden had ‘found it’ and I had to see him. I was skeptical.

Hec and I arrived to a full-sized crowd, and two or three video cameras trained on Eden as he started his show. Travis was right. It was great. There was still that cocky Gazzo swagger but it was all Eden. All his bits were artfully put together, so many clever touches– even more clever if one knew about the psychology of audience management and busking. I’m glad there was a camera crew there to capture it. Travis was right. He was great.

Of course now you want to grab your coat and catch this act. And yes, you can often catch Eden on Granville Island, however, at the moment he’s performing in New Zealand and we’ll have to wait ’til he gets back.

Oh, interestingly, the camera crew that day was from The Busking Project, here’s the link.

Just added: Psychic Home Parties

As regular visitors to davemoses.ca will notice, I’ve added “Psychic Home Parties” to my list of offered strangeness.

I’ve been reading palms, tarot/playing cards and rune stones, for over 20 years… as my teenage journals will attest. Lately, I’ve been doing a lot of readings at my shows,  and frankly it’s as popular as the mind-reading. The trouble is, I love giving readings but I don’t like using the word “psychic”. It’s such a loaded term and it’s just not the way I see myself… I’m not even close to all-seeing and although I use my intuition and imagination– I like to let them be guided by the Oracle I’m using. That’s what fascinates me. I consider myself a skeptic but I’m always impressed how cards on a table,  lines on a palm, or chicken bones thrown on the ground provide us with insightful portraits of ourselves. And with that information allow ourselves to predict the future– by creating one that we want.

… however I don’t think I’m cool enough to pull off a “Psi-party” either. How would I even dress for that? I could call them a “Tarot Evening”… or a “Psychometrist’s Soirée”… but I don’t think that quite cuts it.

So until I find a better name for it, Psychic Home Party will have to stand. I’ll let the internet do it’s thing and allow the people who are looking for this kind of fun to find me.

For the rest of you, it’ll be fun, I promise, with some entertaining demonstrations, a 20 minute or so reading for each guest, some prizes maybe… kinda like a Tupperware party for your imagination.

For more information  click here. And if you have any questions just let me know.

I predict…

… an excellent time this evening, as I prepare to read some minds and palms at the Brockton Preparatory Fundraising Gala.

A Mind Reader for the Holidays

Wow.

Everybody in the world *is* more organized than I am. Not only are things starting to book for the for the holidays– but I’ve got my first booking for next year!

Go ahead… make your “Hm, some mind-reader” jokes now… I can take it… all the way to the bank, baby!

Labouring.

With several other gigs coming down the pike I know there will be fewer opportunities to get out on the street over the next couple of months. So I decided that despite yesterday’s fiasco of a busker in search of a pitch, I would hit Granville Island today and take whatever pitch was left.

I lucked out with both parking and pitch as I Kojak’d a spot very near the Island Plaza. I was disappointed to see Trix bent over his equipment– but he was taking it down. His set was done and the pitch was wide open for the next hour.

There are good days and bad days… which soon become divided into Good good days, Bad good day, Good bad days and Bad bad days.

With the havoc of the heat and inconveniently ‘helpful’ seating, and tight crowds it wasn’t a great day. Plus I was breaking in one new bit which despite a glorious mind movie and a number of valiant efforts is simply not going to work.

But the gasps that came from that family as the broken glass crunched under my foot at the end of my last show…

Very sweet.

Tag Team Busking.

Vancouver busker and card-man Andrew Musgrave posted a great and eloquent essay on the benefits of Tag Team Busking.

I wrote a couple of days ago about a serendipitous event where Rick Mearns (perhaps intentionally, perhaps by accident) helped me build a crowd whilst busking, and he was, unknown to me at the time, a professional magician. Whether he was aware of it or not, he fulfilled the role perfectly, and it got me thinking about codifying some stuff that could be really helpful for anybody looking to work as a street performing magician. Again, I’m no expert, but some of these things strike me as so self-apparent that they’re practically axiomatic.

Read the whole article here.

The only thing I’d add to Andrew’s great list is the motivation that a busking partner provides to actually get you to the pitch. A gentle kick in the pants on a hot day like this for example.

Busking and VanCity Street Culture

An article at The Dependent about busking in Vancouver.

How much has changed?

Please note the two handsome guys in the properly credited photograph!

 

 

Festival Street Shows versus Busking

This past Saturday was probably the hottest day so far this summer… and I couldn’t bare to put on my vest, hat and tie and hit the streets… but that didn’t stop me from heading out to watch somebody else sweating it up while performing magic outside.

So I headed to Langley for it’s Arts Alive Street Festival to watch my magic-buddy, Wes Barker perform.

Some people wonder what the difference is between busking and street performing, say, at Festival… the answer is about $100/hr… kidding… depending on the performer the dollars can vary considerably but there are other factors.

A busker’s job is, in Cellini’s words: “Getting them to stop. Getting them to say… and getting them to pay.” That’s not the case with a festival.

A festival is a destination and by definition people have arrived to see or do something. They’re pre-primed to  stop and watch something, they’re not on their way to the store, an appointment, a movie or a friend’s place– they’ve come, at least partly, to see you!

Getting them to pay isn’t an issue either… usually, though not always, performers are hired by the organizers to provide the entertainment… and tips, although welcome, are not expected.

Which leaves the ‘getting them to stay’ part… and on a hot day with the sweat trickling down behind your ears and down your neck, it’s still the toughest job.

Wes was a great host, he made sure everyone was welcome, that they had a good time– and got rid of them before any of them noticed the heat… and that’s not an easy job when you’re inside a strait jack and the pavement is soft beneath your feet.  It almost made me feel bad for not performing myself that afternoon…

… almost.

Magic and Mystery at the Rails

Mark it in your iCal… There will be an Evening of Magic and Mystery both at the Railway Club on Sunday, August 7th.

Here’s the info from the Facebook page:

For the first time in almost a year, the show one critic called “One of the best nights of entertainment I’ve seen…” returns Sunday, August 7. (Doors open at 7:30, show at 8:00)

Join Wes Barker, Jamie D. Grant, David Moses, and Eric Samuels for an evening you won’t forget. Tix are $10 in advance, $15 at the Door. Each of the past shows has sold out in advance, so purchase early!

So there you go, it promises to be a fun night.

If you want to reserve your tickets (this event is usually sold out– no kidding!) you can save a seat– HERE!

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