Prepare to be amazed! “Jon Racherbaumer – Marlo Low Down and Cozy” unveils card magic secrets by Edward Marlo! Explore subtle tricks & psychological cunning. A must-read for aspiring cardicians!
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Discover the Mastery of Jon Racherbaumer – Marlo Low Down and Cozy
Step into the fascinating world of card magic with this exceptional ebook by Jon Racherbaumer, featuring six ingenious presentations by the legendary Edward Marlo. Known as one of the most prolific creators in the realm of card magic, Marlo’s work is celebrated for its subtlety and psychological finesse. This collection showcases a series of effects that are easy to perform yet astonishingly deceptive, making it a perfect addition to any magician’s repertoire.
What’s Inside the Ebook?
- Cozy Card to Case: A sophisticated twist on a classic trick, Marlo’s version eliminates the need for miscalling cards, offering a seamless and puzzling experience for your audience.
- Marlo’s Low-Down Aces: A refreshing alternative to the well-known “McDonald’s Aces,” this routine offers a startling and deceptive display of magic, allowing you to showcase both sides of every card.
- Spots before Your Eyes: Inspired by Brother John Hamman, this effect is a testament to the art of pip-covering moves, appealing to magic connoisseurs like Derek Dingle and Larry Jennings.
- Smyth Bliss: Utilizing the Rashomon Principle, this semi-automatic trick is a clever play on the classic card magic theme, ensuring a mental puzzle for your spectators.
- Upside-Down Syndrome: A minimalist yet maximum-impact routine, perfect for those who appreciate the elegance of simplicity in card magic.
- Leipzig Would Have Loved This!:
A tribute to Nate Leipzig’s classic, this version provides an accessible approach to a traditionally challenging trick, making it enjoyable for magicians of all skill levels.
Each presentation is not only a lesson in magic but also a dive into the mind of a master magician. These routines are designed to be performed with minimal sleight-of-hand yet promise to deliver maximum impact, ensuring your audience is left in awe.
Published in 2015, this first edition spans 47 pages and contains a wealth of knowledge, equivalent to 39 standard pages of text. Whether you’re a seasoned performer or a curious newcomer, “Marlo Low Down and Cozy” is a treasure trove of card magic that will inspire and challenge you to elevate your craft.
This ebook features six presentations by Edward Marlo, one of the most prolific producers of card magic ever known. My criteria for selecting these six presentations was to pick effects that stressed subtlety and psychological cunning and required little or no difficult sleight-of-hand. The irony here is that such tricks are seldom associated with Marlo, even though he devised scores of easy, semi-automatic tricks during his career. But don’t despair. The ones in this ebook run a gamut.
Cozy Card to Case is a subtle version of an ancient trick dating back to Walter Gibson’s Popular Card Tricks. Most versions are based on miscalling a card. Marlo’s underhanded version eliminates writing down the names of cards and is not based on miscalling. Furthermore, it is easy to do and will puzzle anyone familiar with older methods.
Marlo’s Low-Down Aces provides a change-of-pace from performing “McDonald’s Aces” and was a precursor of Bob Kohler’s marketed, “Aces in Their Faces.” If you already own Kohler’s version, you can use his gimmicked cards. Otherwise this groundbreaking version permits you to ostensibly show both sides of every card and each disappearance of Aces from their respective packets is quite startling and deceptive.
Spots before Your Eyes is a spin-off of an under-appreciated effect by Brother John Hamman. Also, how the Pip-Covering Moves are done might change your mind about using this artifice? If so, you will probably understand why this effect appealed to Derek Dingle, Larry Jennings, and Bruce Cervon.
Smyth Bliss is a good example of how Marlo squeezed more “juice” from known principles. In this case, the operative principle, set forth by Professor Sydney Lawrence in Ten Self-Working Master Effects, is the Rashomon Principle. Two spectators are forced to choose the same card due to a clever placement idea. 1 This great semi-automatic trick took to heart Al Baker’s admonishment that “magicians stop thinking too soon.”
The Twisting craze has mercifully abated, but Vernon’s “Twisting the Aces” is still performed. Marlo’s Upside-Down Syndrome is based on a “buried” Larry West trick and is an example of getting maximum effect using only a few cards.
Leipzig Would Have Loved This! is a tribute to Nate Leipzig’s classic version and is based on a Herbert Milton trick dating back to the early 20s. The original versions used double-face cards and many magicians worked out variations –Charlie Miller, Orville Meyer, and Derek Dingle, to name a few. Marlo’s initial ungimmicked version was published in The Cardician (1953), but was too challenging for most students to master. This version eliminates difficult sleights and substitutes cozy subtleties.
1st edition 2015, 47 pages.
word count: 9982 which is equivalent to 39 standard pages of text
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