Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Monday, January 16, 2017

(Vacational) Music Composition Lesson


Think of music not in symbolic terms, nor as syntax and grammar. Think of music in physical terms, as energy and matter.

Think of form not as a succession of sound events, but rather as a fontal happening with a shape made out of texture, transparency/opacity, density, weight and movement.

Think of content not as a reflection of experience but as experience itself.

Think of change not as the actions done by time nor as transfer from some-thing to another thing. Think of change as transition, as continuation-modification. Think of time as life itself. 


Think with your heart, your senses and your mind.

Monday, February 1, 2016

Composition lesson from Hemingway

Maria Popova, through her Brain Pickings blog, shared the following advice Hemingway gave to the young aspiring writer Arnold Samuelson. If we change the word "writer" for "composer", and add "listen" to the word "read", we'll get a very good lesson for those making music.
I think it healthy to maintain interest in the music that's presently being made, but with a certain distance in terms of learning from it or, as Hemingway put it, stealing from it. Instead, one does better to learn from the recent (and perhaps not so recent) masters. That way, through some distance, we can better tell the good stuff from bullshit. Also, we don't get sucked into stupid games of jealusy and grudges.
Never compete with living writers. You don’t know whether they’re good or not. Compete with the dead ones you know are good. Then when you can pass them up you know you’re going good. You should have read all the good stuff so that you know what has been done, because if you have a story like one somebody else has written, yours isn’t any good unless you can write a better one. In any art you’re allowed to steal anything if you can make it better, but the tendency should always be upward instead of down. And don’t ever imitate anybody. All style is, is the awkwardness of a writer in stating a fact. If you have a way of your own, you are fortunate, but if you try to write like somebody else, you’ll have the awkwardness of the other writer as well as your own.
—Ernest Hemingway.