Re: The Blog Returns
Posted: Sun Sep 25, 2011 1:21 pm
I know what you mean about the creative gap, I experience it constantly with my music. I look back on the two years of formal training and sometimes think that I should be better. I've practiced 4-8 hours a day, I should be able to convey my thoughts better than I do. There was a story my teacher and good friend (and all around musical genius) told to me.
He was watching a video of a saxophone player, and this sax player was really good. he was playing in the (excuse me for my music language) key of D and he was just screaming out of his sax and he did this weird walk up into the key C using the key of F and somehow he walked back down in to D. It didn't even feel like he ever left the key of D. The guy on the video said that the lesson was this, that for your music to sound good, you need to have every bit of confidence that it's going to sound good. He's right, and I believe this it true for any type of art, if you want people to like what you do, you have to believe that what your doing is great, because if you don't, people will be able to tell, maybe not consciously, but they will be able to tell.
He was watching a video of a saxophone player, and this sax player was really good. he was playing in the (excuse me for my music language) key of D and he was just screaming out of his sax and he did this weird walk up into the key C using the key of F and somehow he walked back down in to D. It didn't even feel like he ever left the key of D. The guy on the video said that the lesson was this, that for your music to sound good, you need to have every bit of confidence that it's going to sound good. He's right, and I believe this it true for any type of art, if you want people to like what you do, you have to believe that what your doing is great, because if you don't, people will be able to tell, maybe not consciously, but they will be able to tell.