"Okay Tom, I am finally starting to
feel a little more comfortable with
the physical aspect of my playing,
but I have a hard time being
creative. I can't seem to write
songs or improvise at the same level
as I can play my guitar. Everything
I do sounds stiff, or typical and
not very creative or expressive. Am
I just not a creative person? Is
there anything that I can do about
this?"
That question is a very typical
one that I (and probably most people
who have ever taught guitar) am very
often asked. Before I go into detail
to answer it I need to say that in
order to completely overcome such a
problem will require one to work at
it for a long time. And I strongly
suggest working with an excellent
teacher to help you through this.
He/she will save you a lot of time,
effort, aggravation, etc. (Refer to
my previous article on
"Choosing A Teacher".)
Most players have, at some time
in their musical development, felt
uncreative, uninspired or otherwise
not very expressive musically.
Fortunately, there are several
things that can help one get over
this. The problem is in being
creative and expressive as a
musician not as a human being, it is
important to recognize the
difference. We are all creative and
expressive as people (that's a big
part of what makes us human). One's
perceived lack of creativity and
expressiveness is most likely not
due to a lack of creativity or
expression at all, but rather a lack
of fundamental musical skills.
Typically the problem is caused by a
combination of factors such as those
in the following list:
Theory Problems
- Not knowing your fretboard well
enough so that you don't need to
think about where the notes are as
you are playing, improvising and
writing music.
- Not having memorized all the
notes in the key(s) you're working
with.
- Not knowing what notes are in
what chords.
- Not knowing what notes are
consonant and what notes are
dissonant in any given situation
(and more importantly, how to
control dissonance in theory!)
Aural Skills (Ear training)
Problems
- Not listening closely enough to
recognize consonance and dissonance.
- Not knowing how to use and
control dissonance aurally.
- Not knowing what notes and
chords are going to sound like
before you play them!
- Not being able to aurally (by
ear) understand the emotional
function of each individual pitch in
a scale and a chord.
Technique Problems
- Not having enough physical
technique developed on your
instrument to do the types of things
that will allow you to be creative.
If you are severely restricted
musically by what your hands are
able to do (or rather, what your
hands are not able to do), it will
be physically hard (or impossible)
to do certain creative things.
- Not knowing how or when to
control your technique.
- Thinking too much about what
your hands can do instead of
what you want them to be able
to do in order to execute your
creative possibilities.
If you have any of the above
problems, work on fixing them
because those things, although not
really elements of creativity
itself, are the basic skills that
one must posses to be
creative/expressive on an
instrument. The human mind is
amazing and can do several
simultaneous operations, but the
more things you ask your mind to do
at the same time, the more difficult
it becomes to do any of them well.
To really be creative and musically
expressive, you need as much of your
conscious brain energy as possible
to be concentrating on being
creative/expressive. If you don't
really understand what notes you can
use in a given situation to produce
desirable results, and at the same
time your mind has no idea what the
notes are going to sound like before
you play them, and at the same time,
you are struggling with the
limitations of what you can
physically play, and at the same
time, you don't know how to control
dissonance, etc., how much conscious
brain power do you actually have
left to think about improvising an
expressive guitar solo, create an
original melody, or to write a song
with new ideas? I would bet that the
majority of those of you reading
this have this problem to some
extent. I suggest to make it a
priority to get these basic skills
under your belt as soon as you can.
Once you have (or if you have) a
good amount of control over the
basic musicianship skills, you are
ready to go deeper into the creative
aspects of playing / writing.
I usually find that my most
creative musical ideas don't come
from thinking about music at all. I
look at other forms of art (and
nature) to find new ways to see
creativity. Once I have an
interesting idea or concept in mind,
I look to find all the possible ways
that I may be able to adapt that
into musical form to suit my musical
needs. Following is an example of
what I am talking about.
A few years ago I began thinking
about the similarities and
differences in the different
processes that are used in separate
art forms (painting, music, poetry,
stone or marble sculpture, etc.) Of
the four I just mentioned, only
stone cut and marble cut sculpture
starts with something (the
raw materials of stone or marble)
and then the artist destructively
eliminates materials to create the
art. Poetry, music and painting
generally are created from
nothing (no materials from which
to take away from) thus the artist
creates the music constuctively
(adding materials - letters, words,
musical pitches, rhythms, brush
strokes of wet paint, etc.). I once
made this simple analysis of the
stone sculpture process, I knew that
its importance would be significant
and valuable to me eventually. After
almost a year of thinking about a
way in which I could apply the
principle of destructive creation
(versus constructive creation), I
finally had some brand new ideas (at
least they were brand new ideas to
me) for a new creative way (process)
to write music. I found ways to
apply this to general musical
compositional processes and form.
I'm sure there are more ways to
apply the principal that I have not
yet thought of. If I told you my own
discoveries it might hinder you from
discovering your own and going
beyond what I was able to do. I
encourage you to think deeply about
how you might be able to apply
destructive creation into new
musical writing processes.
Another example of taking
creative processes from other forms
came when I was watching a Disney
movie on DVD. There was a special
features section after the movie on
the DVD in which the film makers
showed diagrams and charts called
story boards. The purpose of these
story boards was to communicate more
clearly the ideas from the writers
and producers of the movie to the
artists who were creating the
animation for the film. I thought
about how this might be applied to
my advantage when writing the music
for my "Opus 2" CD. Since I had in
my mind all of the things I wanted
to express in the music, I used this
story board technique to better
communicate between the right side
of my brain and the left side of my
brain. I charted out with diagrams,
charts, elemental lists, etc. all of
my non musical ideas (emotions,
thoughts, ideals, experiences, etc.)
that I wanted expressed in the
music. The plans were much more
organized now, I could clearly see
what I wanted to be expressed at
what moment during the music. This
helped to keep me on track
musically. I was very pleased with
the final result. There many other
processes that I used in composing
"Opus 2" (and "Opus 1"), but this
general principal is one that I
think any composer or songwriter can
use no matter how advanced or basic
one's music writing skills are.
As the previous example
illustrates, I typically think about
what I want to express before I
think about writing the music. That
is something that surprisingly not a
lot (probably most) songwriters
don't really do much (especially in
the non classical music world.) I'm
not saying that my ways and
processes for writing music are
better than someone else's way
(because I believe all methods are
legitimate), I'm just offering here
one of my ways of composing which
may be a new approach for you.