Seems like before he retired a number of years ago it was Lee Iacocca that said, "If you do pretty much anything 5 hours a day, five days a week, for 5 years, you can legitimately think yourself an expert in that field.timothyallan wrote:I went to a music based lecture yesterday, and one of the points mentioned was that the average amount of time you needed to spend practicing to be considered a 'master' of a certain craft was around 10,000 hours. The definition of master could be argued ad nauseum, so let's just assume for the moment it means pretty farking good.
Have you put in your 10,000?
Get out a calculator and really try and approximate, it's quite interesting when you get a final number.
Things is, just because you are an expert doesn't mean you can ever become more than the sum of your own natural talent. You can know all there is to know about something and never create anything truly exceptional in that field of endeavor.
I've sat down and played with people that had been playing for 30 years. I was playing better than them and their accumulative years in a year and a half. Some people just have no musical talent but love music tremendously. I've met guys with tremendous singing voices that could not play guitar to save their ass.
Music is art and everyone knows the best artists that ever lived were in and of them selves the best artists that ever lived. That had ZERO to do with training. Practice of course is not the same as training. Most dexterity and capable facilitation are the products of regular physical training. Those muscles don't develop on their own. Although certain individuals are built for the long hall far and away superior to others.
GAFM ***