I used to think that great music was about speed – how fast can ones fingers glide across the piano, shred on the guitar, fly on the drum kit?
I used to think that great music was about difficulty – as if greatness was directly related to one’s ability to play Liszt’s Transcendental Etudes.
I used to think that great music could only be played on a great instrument. If you didn’t have something that was at least $1000, what you were playing was total crap.
Believe it or not, I also used to think electronic music was lame. I mean, what skill is really involved?
It’s not that brilliant musicians can’t play fast or difficult music. Or that they refuse to use nice instruments. No, it’s just that their music is deeper than that. It’s more real. It comes from within.
Music isn’t just about technical prowess and difficulty. It’s in your mind. Combining sounds. Using sound to create emotion, to paint a picture, to communicate depth. Whether that’s on a Steinway or a Macbook, it doesn’t matter.
It’s not about having the most expensive gear. Or having the most gear. Brilliant musicians use whatever is in front of them to communicate. They feel inspiration from everything and can make anything sound good.
Whether they have a pedal board full of Strymon pedals or a Squire with a Digitech delay, they find the inspiration. They don’t make excuses. They find a way to express their heart. To go deep. To communicate through their instrument.
That doesn’t mean you never buy nice equipment. It means you don’t rely on the instrument itself for the music. You rely on your mind, your heart, your ability to feel something deep, and in turn, cause every listener to feel something deep.
Here’s a test: Pick up your instrument and create a deep emotional sound using one note. That’s right – one drum, one key on the piano, one fret on your bass or guitar.
You know you’ve passed the test when that isn’t boring.
The Law of Creative Constraint
If you had more money to buy nicer equipment, you could really be creative right? Imagine if you had a home studio full of the best stuff that you could access whenever you wanted. Imagine how brilliant you would become.
All of that was true except for becoming more creative and brilliant. Sure, it would be nice. But creativity doesn’t always thrive on more.
You can actually be more creative with constraints on your art.
Limit your options and see what creativity will thrive.
It’s a myth to think that having eons of all the best equipment will make you more creative. Oftentimes it’s nothing more than stalling – a distraction from making beautiful art with who you are NOW and what you have NOW. Don’t wait. Stop stalling.
Start creating stuff.
You Should Try This Too
Block out 30 minutes to play your instrument. But before you allow your hands to travel to familiar chord patterns and familiar songs you’ve been playing for years, think for a moment.
Breathe.
Picture something in your mind. Maybe a sunset. Maybe someone in need. Maybe Chipotle. Maybe your church.
Think about how you feel in the moment.
Picture what you’re passionate about.
Now…slowly, intentionally play a simple melody that reflects what’s in your heart. When you do this, you’ll find that emotion flows more naturally. Why? Because you’re basing your musical idea on something meaningful to you. You’re interpreting something real.
This applies to singers too. Picture something and communicate emotion through your voice. Having great pitch isn’t enough. Bare your soul. Be vulnerable. Give a gift.
That’s what the best musicians do. They realize music isn’t just in their fingers or their voice. It’s an extension of…themselves.
What do you think about this? What separates the best musicians from most? Let’s continue the discussion. You can leave a comment by clicking here.
[ois skin=”Beyond Sunday 2″]
Glenn Harrell says
This reminds me of an episode of King of the Hill I watched this morning.
Bobby–the son–joins a bible class and the rest can be seen.
This might well be on the required viewing list for all would be leaders in the local church.
Season 8 Episode 2 “Reborn to Be Wild”
Thank you for the Chipotle. I needed that.
David Santistevan says
Haha, we could all use a little Chipotle 🙂
Dave Therrien says
Hi David – your posts are always excellent. My group played a Palm Sunday event at our parish last Sunday called “His Priceless Gift”. This prayer gathering brings people to walk beside Jesus from Gethsemane to the cross through spoken word, music and pretty intense images of Jesus’ suffering. We include peaceful and powerful tunes (Thief by Third Day, Mary’s Song by Kathleen Carnali, O the Blood by Gateway, Plate’s Dream and Gethsemane from Jesus Christ SuperStar and many more. My group is seasoned enough where we appreciate that less music is “more”. The message in the lyrics of these passion songs are much more important to hear than an amazing guitar riff. The most beautiful songs were almost sung acapella with light piano or acoustic guitar. The congregation was able to experience that walk beside the Lord, and there wasn’t a dry eye in the church. Very powerful. What a sacrifice that saved my life….
David Santistevan says
Dave, this sounds amazing! What is the name of your band?
Bridget says
Thanks, David. I needed that encouraging reminder that a limitation of instruments/gear is not an obstacle to creativity, beauty, and worship.
David Santistevan says
I want to be clear – there’s nothing wrong with getting new gear 🙂 That can actually inspire creativity. But oftentimes our greatest creativity is hidden behind what we consider our greatest limitation.
Anonymous says
I am a keyboardist playing almost 19 years at church. I totally understand what u mean. It’s not yr skills nor yr speed that impress, it’s the heart playing that counts. Less is more. Nevertheless, each musician has to upgrade his or her skills eventually bwcause skills will enhance the playing and enable the smooth flow.
David Santistevan says
Totally. I’m not against skill development. It actually takes incredible skill to dial back the flashy stuff and simply serve what the song needs.