
GuitardedMark
New member
Music is a creative product, I belive it all comes down to the left/right part of the brain. Those people who are naturally creative will find it very easy to play/write music with little need to know how and why it sounds good. Then there are the more academic/logical minded people, who this doesn't come easily so they need explanations, they need to use maths and have in depth understanding of what it is they are doing. these are the people who music theory belongs to, they need these 'rules' to make music.
You can give anyone all the music books in the world, and 20+ years classical training from very young age. By technical academic standards they are great, but can they write music that goes beyond the mechanics of music? probably not.
Take Steve Vai, or Joe Satriani nobody can say that they arn't amazing guitarists, but their music is thin, hollow and boring the only way these people can think of making their music better is to play faster, more complex progressions add more unusual scales etc. . . adding more maths. but would you say that they are more amazing then a guitarist like BB King who can sit still on a chair in front thousands of people playing 1 note, bending it slightly a few times yet creating a massive emotional thrill that can by far surpass anything I have listened to from the former artists.
If you have a logical mind music theory will help you because this mind set needs some set, solid rules. If you are more creative minded then these rules won't matter, weather or not you can write a song in blah blah bullshit mode in the cock # scale doesn't matter because 9/10 these simple songs will create a better responce. and that is the point of music.
I agree with most of what you said except the steve vai part

YouTube - Steve Vai - "Bad Horsie"