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Why your best ideas usually start as bad ones | Think Like A Musician
Why your best ideas usually start as bad ones | Think Like A Musician
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0:01
It's a cliché to say that mistakes, imperfections make something special,
0:06
but they really, really do.
0:08
In art, embrace mistakes.
0:10
The mistake is the journey.
0:12
And it’s you getting better because your voice probably won’t crack there
0:16
the next time— it’s just another moment to pivot from.
0:19
So never freak out about making mistakes, is really what it boils down to.
0:24
Hey, you! Yes, you. Is there music inside of you?
0:28
We’ve recruited working musicians from throughout the industry
0:32
to help you hear it, hold it, and share it with this wild and wonderful world.
0:39
At least for me, from between the studio and a live situation,
0:44
some of the adjustment for me means like letting go
0:48
of a type of obsessive perfectionism
0:51
about the sound quality and also in performance,
0:59
being willing to fall down and get dirty or make mistakes.
1:04
My first songs, my early songs are pretty embarrassing,
1:08
but I think I was just kind of figuring it out.
1:11
And I was really literally just taking the poems that I had written,
1:14
which were kind of cryptic and a little bit dark
1:17
because I was like a moody adolescent,
1:20
and putting them to melodies.
1:22
But I hadn’t really learned the importance of song structure.
1:26
It started out as a very personal outlet for me.
1:29
And then later I sort of learned how to write something that was more accessible,
1:33
that people could understand where I was coming from,
1:36
and maybe get some catharsis out of that.
1:38
You don’t just automatically jump immediately to perfection.
1:43
That's what's so great about experimentation.
1:46
What I’ve loved about collaborating with other songwriters and musicians
1:49
is I hear them come out with some not so great ideas,
1:53
some pretty lousy ideas.
1:55
And I realized that they will come up with eight lousy ideas or even like 15,
2:00
and the 16th or 20th or 30th idea,
2:04
suddenly it’s like, that is brilliant!
2:07
And the listener will never know of the other 30 lousy ideas that it took
2:12
to finally come to a sense of clarity and something locking in.
2:15
That’s not right. That’s not right. This is right! There it is.
2:19
But you have to be willing to let it come out.
2:22
Out of the thousands of songs you write, maybe five might be a hit. Maybe.
2:27
You’re really, really lucky as a songwriter
2:29
if you get a number one record one time.
2:32
You could literally start at any age, you could literally not be able to sing,
2:39
but as long as you understand what your thing is,
2:42
there is no one type of way to songwrite or to produce
2:46
or to do any of these things.
2:47
There’s no right way. It’s, what is my way?
2:50
And then I find the appropriate people to collaborate with
2:54
to make this a well-rounded thing, because that is what our industry is about,
2:58
is collaboration.
2:59
Mark D. Sanders, he’s a writer in Nashville,
3:01
he said to me once, songwriting is like fishing.
3:03
He said, you can stand in the water days on end and get nothing.
3:07
Or you can stand in the water for four seconds
3:10
and catch the biggest fish you’ve ever caught in your entire life.
3:13
He goes, it’s not the outcome, it’s that you’re in the water.
3:16
So, if you think of songwriting and sessions as a fishing expedition,
3:22
you can sit out there for hours and it wasn’t the day for it.
3:26
Or you can sit out there for no time and you had a great day.
3:31
So it’s very much just like a thing you do every day
3:36
for the sake of the great ones that might happen today
3:39
and might happen a week from now.
3:40
When I was young, I do remember those songs just [snaps].
3:43
And there's another and another and another, and it still happens.
3:47
But after however many hundreds of songs,
3:50
it becomes new you versus old you
3:52
saying something that you’ve said from an entirely different perspective.
3:57
So as far as locking into a song
4:00
and knowing when you’ve found the song’s proper path,
4:04
if I was going to, not advise, but opine,
4:08
I would say break all the rules.
4:11
Run through all the walls and do not conform.
4:15
And last but not least, sometimes we don't know our best work.
4:19
I’ve put songs away that I’ve years later played for people
4:22
and have ended up on records because they had to tell me what it is.
4:27
You're going to have to listen to somebody
4:29
and you're going to have to take advice from someone.
4:32
And if you can find that one person to trust with your process,
4:38
you're really lucky to have that person.
Why your best ideas usually start as bad ones | Think Like A Musician - Video học tiếng Anh