Logo
Home
language
Loading...

Which instrument should you play? | Think Like A Musician

듣기/Video/TED-Ed/Which instrument should you play? | Think Like A Musician

Which instrument should you play? | Think Like A Musician

TED-Ed
3000 Oxford Words4000 IELTS Words5000 Oxford Words3000 Common Words1000 TOEIC Words5000 TOEFL Words

자막 (131)

0:02I couldn't possibly recognize that it was going to be as important a moment
0:07as it’s become.
0:09But I knew that nothing else along my life’s journey
0:13had affected me in that way.
0:14And that was it— I heard the lap steel guitar and there was no turning back.
0:20Hey, you! Yes, you.
0:22What’s that light inside of you? Is it a dream? A beat?
0:27A beautiful sound? A heartbreaking song?
0:30Whatever it is, we’re here with working musicians
0:33to help you grow and share that gift with this wild and wonderful world.
0:40The guitar. First of all, it's something that you can carry around with you.
0:44I really, really love that about it,
0:46because I had a lot of feelings about not belonging
0:50and trying to find my place in the world.
0:53So having the guitar as this very travelable companion
0:59made a lot of sense to me.
1:00It accompanies the voice so well.
1:02So for me it was about the songwriting.
1:04It was about the singing and the guitar was just the vehicle to do that.
1:09So, I don’t think the clarinet would have worked for me.
1:12I started on, when everybody starts their instrument in the 5th grade,
1:16I played the clarinet.
1:18I loved playing music with other people, played the flute for a little while,
1:21and then eventually moved on to the alto saxophone.
1:24I think I just wanted to try them all.
1:26But finally I wanted to be in a symphony orchestra.
1:28So I had heard of the oboe.
1:30I didn't know anybody that played it.
1:32I went on YouTube and just watched video after video
1:36and player after player of this interesting instrument.
1:39I mean, the rest is history— I loved it.
1:42I am obviously an oboist and I've been playing for probably 14 years now.
1:49I heard the lap steel played when I was very young,
1:52and it was the sound that pulled me in in a way that was a mystery that to this day
1:57I’ve been in pursuit of.
1:59It's always difficult to put words to what and why an instrument pulls you in,
2:05that mystery is part of what makes it special
2:07to the person playing that instrument.
2:10I have very clear memories of music finding me.
2:14And I think as a as a child I was maybe I was struggling sometimes
2:19and I needed to escape.
2:22And I had this shelter, which was music.
2:25Over the years— so as a very young child, I played different instruments.
2:29I end up playing guitar and then bass,
2:32and for me it works really well with my personality.
2:36Bass is more about sort of a combination of rhythm and harmony.
2:40You have to love groove,
2:41and you have to sort of appreciate the power of repeating a bassline basically.
2:46I always loved meditating,
2:48and I think from early age I found playing bass somewhat like a meditation.
2:54First answer, real honest:
2:55I chose the piano because this girl I had a crush on in 3rd grade played piano.
2:59So I was like, oh shoot, let’s go!
3:01I also fell in love with the piano, so that worked out well.
3:06I was 8 or 9 when I started playing piano.
3:09I was 13 when I started telling people I was going to be a songwriter for a living.
3:13And it never really stopped from there.
3:15I played alto saxophone for probably 10 years because I love jazz.
3:22There's a part of me that had to realize you only have a certain
3:25amount of hours in a day,
3:26and if you're going to play something and play it to a professional level,
3:30you gotta triage, right?
3:31So saxophone was awesome and I love it, but it just wasn't doing it,
3:34you know what I mean?
3:35I think the piano is a super power instrument
3:39because all of music theory is laid out before you
3:42once you understand the piano.
3:44Now, I also play guitar. It’s not as linear.
3:47I can bring theory structure to the guitar because I understand it on piano first.
3:53I will give credit to one of my first piano teachers.
3:56Her name is Florence.
3:57I would bring her a song and I'd say, I want to learn this song.
4:00And she'd say, okay, first try it on your own with your ears,
4:03and then come back and I’ll show you what you should adjust.
4:06And so I fell in love with the sheer process of
4:09realizing that all of these keys in front of me mean something,
4:13and if I sat here long enough, I could sound like people that I look up to.
4:18Music. I love it.
4:19How did I get from a love of music to the drums?
4:22I think that there’s an element of patience
4:25that’s required in learning music.
4:27I think drumming didn't inflame my lack of patience.
4:32I had plenty of opportunities to learn piano and I felt disconnected from it.
4:37I had plenty of opportunities to learn guitar—
4:40I felt totally intimidated by it.
4:42Drumming, it seemed to be initially simple enough
4:47and also loud enough
4:50to where I felt an immediate shock of power and excitement.
4:55And I didn’t feel intimidated by the complexities.
4:59I felt a balance of gratification and satisfaction
5:03that the fact that it gave me that so quickly,
5:06it then kind of circumvented my tendency to be impatient
5:11and unwilling to learn.
5:12I think when you pick an instrument,
5:14you shouldn't skip the part where you think, what kind of person am I?
5:18Is this going to be a good avenue to express myself?
5:23Or am I going to be just frustrated?
5:25If you need constant attention
5:27and you want to be in the front of the band all the time,
5:31try the guitar.
5:32I think when you want to make that choice,
5:35let's say you want to get into a band or you want to pick an instrument
5:39and there’s guitar and there’s bass
5:41and you want to decide which one is right for you,
5:44you might want to consider the element of rhythm,
5:47the sort of ability to move a whole room of people,
5:52with playing a bass line.
5:54In the beginning, I just wasn't really very passionate about it.
5:58Now, I pick up my guitar and I can’t imagine doing anything else.
6:04It’s an outlet for me. It’s like my form of self-expression.
6:07The same way I love art and photography,
6:10music is just another way for me to express myself.
6:15There are guitars with nylon strings.
6:17There are guitars with steel strings, all different shapes and sizes.
6:21Electric, acoustic.
6:23Acoustic and electric guitar.
6:25They feel so different and you definitely do have to cater your playing style to it.
6:31And I actually find that playing acoustic transfers over to electric
6:35better than playing electric transfers over to an acoustic guitar.
6:39Yeah, it’s an exciting venture, the guitar.
6:42I mean, every time I pick it up, I’m learning something.
6:44I’m still learning new things every day and trying to improve myself.
6:50It’s the connection. Music is a language.
6:53It's a way to connect.
6:55When you go to see shows, see what moves you.
6:58If something touches you,
6:59you probably have something within yourself that is similar.
7:03So what's your thing?
7:04You probably have your own special thing to to bring as a performer.
7:08Sometimes it’s an energy thing,
7:10like you open doors and the right thing will find you.