glitchrock-buddha wrote:Not necessarily.timothyallan wrote:I would argue that quantity gets you quality.
Practice makes permanent.
Perfect practice makes perfect.
this
glitchrock-buddha wrote:Not necessarily.timothyallan wrote:I would argue that quantity gets you quality.
Practice makes permanent.
Perfect practice makes perfect.
drumrak wrote:glitchrock-buddha wrote:Not necessarily.timothyallan wrote:I would argue that quantity gets you quality.
Practice makes permanent.
Perfect practice makes perfect.
yeah, what do you think practice is? staring at your instrument? no, its playing your instrument a lot (quantity)
cool man, just a sanity check. my boss is getting all up in my ass, gotta take care of some shit.DrXparaMental wrote:stuff
OK, I'm kind of like Tone Deft, I'm at work and things are so dynamic, but I will make it straight, or at least I'll try.Lo-Fi Massahkah wrote:I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. Talk to me like I was a 5-year old.DrXparaMental wrote:The science of repetition is undeniable. The science of repetition cannot build creativity, style or natural inclination. Repetition perfects on itself. That self is apart, not a part, of you and the unique quality of your talents.![]()
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DrXparaMental wrote: I just respect the forum as a whole more than a rush job.
birdhouse19 wrote:i was playing a club last night and had to play some rap, and i know ableton live isnt very good with rap without a sound card.
you know that significantly decreases the odds for misunderstandings and a proper flame war.DrXparaMental wrote:I just respect the forum as a whole more than a rush job.
This is not true. No one is born with an instrument in their hands. Even W.A. Mozart wasn't born with it; Leopold just put a violin in his hand as soon as he could stand. The people who have perfect pitch usually have it because they were intensely immersed in music from an early age, so the equal tempered pitches become familiar entities just like letters of the alphabet.DrXparaMental wrote:There is great truth in the old "hard work" theorem, but all the hard work and perfect practice can't give you a lick of pitch. You either got it, or you don't. All those goofy adds in music rags that guarantee you perfect pitch are just like all the miracle weight loss adds in tabloids. It's trinkets and trash that don't work. I've seen numerous serious shredders that could play violin scales all day long. They couldn't improvise or play by ear to save their life. They had no ear.
Remember back when you first started playing? It took me about 2 years after I first started to figure out how to tell if a musician was any good or not. the ones that were good and could truly kick ass were the ones that figured out the cover tunes note for note with no "reasonable facsimiles" in substitution. You'll never be shit if you don't have a good ear. That's a fact.
Yep. Of course if you practice poor technique, you will become a master at bad technique.glitchrock-buddha wrote:Not necessarily.timothyallan wrote:I would argue that quantity gets you quality.
Practice makes permanent.
Perfect practice makes perfect.
Would it be too much to ask for you to respond with something slightly more "in context"? Nothing I have stated touches upon your refute.stringtapper wrote: This is not true. No one is born with an instrument in their hands. Even W.A. Mozart wasn't born with it; Leopold just put a violin in his hand as soon as he could stand. The people who have perfect pitch usually have it because they were intensely immersed in music from an early age, so the equal tempered pitches become familiar entities just like letters of the alphabet.
You got your "ear" from listening and playing. That's work. Anyone can learn to hear. I know this from experience. I teach college freshman ear training, and I know with enough work you can learn to hear. Yes we get some turkeys who can't match pitch, but that's mostly because they don't know how to use their voice.
Now I know you will say that I'm talking about ear training instead of "feel training," but I am talking about that too. Listening and absorbing styles is how you learn "feel." Active listening is work. If you had never listened to the kind of music you play on the bass, you would not have the feel or groove.
I think it would apply to writing lyrics as well. If your lyrics consist of singing ABC's then yes, it would have started when you learnt your ABC's and applied them to your songwriting.H20nly wrote:So if you practice you get better.
OR
If you are "born with" it you practice to make those who aren't feel better.
Does this about sum it up?
I still want to know if this applies to lyrics. And if so does it start when you begin to learn your ABCs or when you actually start writing lyrics?