
famous beagle
Well-known member
EDAN said:No, knowlegde is great, but theory is not going to help in the creative process as far as songwriting goes, no one will ever convince me of that. Now, it may or may not help you be a better musician, but songwriting, no.
Well, I'm not sure what you really mean by that. There is nothing wrong with being a studio musician, but as far as the record industry goes, songwriters are certianly thought of as higher up in the ranks. There are coutless musicians they can get to lay down tracks, but good or great or hit songs are much harder to come by and good great songs along with the artist is what sells albums, not the hired hands who laid the tracks down. I will certianly say that a good musician with taste and talent can sometimes add something to a recording that can help make it shine, but lets face it, without the song and songwriter there is nothing to make shine, there are no studio musicians there are no singers (who don't write), there are no producers nor record labels. It all starts with the song and the songwriter.
EDAN, I'm not really sure why you are so against the idea of learning theory. I understand if you don't feel the need to do it, but others do, and maybe it DOES help others.
I think I'm a very good example.
When I started playing (age 15 or so), my ear was HORRIBLE. I saw a video of my friend and I playing "Every Rose has Its Thorn," and it was incredible how out of tune the guitars were. And I was "singing" in another key most of the time.
Well, after a few years of practice, I went to UNT, studied jazz, classical, music theory, and listened to tons of music.
Now, I'm a MUCH, much better musician because of all that, and I think my songwriting has improved as well.
Please go listen to these two songs: "Nobody Showers" and "That's What I'd Say." Then tell me what you think.
The quality isn't astounding because they were recorded quickly, and they're scratch tracks, and they weren't meant to be "hits," so don't judge them on that basis.
(I tried to listen to your song yesterday, but I couldn't find it.)
Anyway, let me know if you honestly think I "don't have it."
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/pagemusic.cfm?bandID=328768
P.S. I'm not changing my opinion on the matter. I still think you don't HAVE to learn theory to become an accomplished musician. All I'm objecting to is your blanket statement that "Theory will not help someone with songwriting." This may be true for some, but not for everyone.