composerorganist Posted August 16, 2011 Posted August 16, 2011 This website is a must read for all YCer “To achieve your musical potential, you have to commit to the creative process, take risks, and follow your heart.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 112 To gain a deeper understanding of something, it often helps to consider its opposite. So, in the interest of helping you boost your creativity, here’s a list of ways to squash it. Enjoy! Quit when things don’t immediately work out. It takes persistent work to flesh out ideas and solve creative problems. If you throw up your hands at the first hint of difficulty, you can kiss your creative promise goodbye. Avoid feedback. Feedback offsets your blind spots. By not seeking it out, especially during your developmental years, you ensure mediocrity. Shun doing research. Assume that you possess sweeping knowledge, never study the work of others, and don’t ever question your thought processes. Expect all of your ideas to be brilliant. To generate good ideas, you have to churn out lots of not-so-good ones too. By insisting on nothing but brilliance from yourself, you dial your self-critic up to 10 and stick a cork in the first stage of the creative process. Evaluate your work from a single perspective. Writing a song? Only consider the rhythmic groove and don’t get all concerned about the words, melody, or harmony. Better yet, don’t evaluate or revise it at all – accept that your initial outpouring is a true expression of your genius. Ignore experts. Given that expert coaching fuels creative excellence, steer clear of taking lessons or otherwise tapping the wisdom of leaders in your field. Never collaborate. Two or more minds are far more powerful than one. And as collaborators’ ideas cross-pollenate, they multiply in creative power. By isolating yourself, you help keep your thinking on a narrow track. Take criticism personally. When you hear criticism, treat it as a personal attack. Promptly dismiss it, and then hurl some invective in response. Procrastinate. Creative people work. If you feel a creative urge bubbling up, instead of acting on it, veg in front of the TV or give in to Twitter addiction. Don’t look after yourself. On the occasions when you actually do sit down to create, pound away relentlessly, ignore your health, and run yourself into the ground. That way, if you managed to produce anything meaningful, it won’t be happening again anytime soon. Are anti-creative habits undermining your potential? See The Musician’s Way for help, especially “Fueling Motivation” & “Committing to the Creative Process” (p. 105-112) as well as “Boosting Creativity (p. 309-314). Related posts can be found under the Creative Process category. © 2011 Gerald Klickstein Photo © Péter Gudella, licensed from Shutterstock.com 2 Quote
MariusChamberlin Posted August 17, 2011 Posted August 17, 2011 Love the last one. I'll have to check this out it seems pretty interesting. Thanks for the link CO! Quote
SergeOfArniVillage Posted September 7, 2011 Posted September 7, 2011 This was very encouraging to read, because I believe I can agree with all of them :) I also believe that I have, in fact, taken most of them to heart -- the only one I may not have really done is collaborate, per se. I've taken someone's piece of music, and remixed it in my style, upon request, but that's not really the same, is it? :hmmm: And I didn't use to follow the last point of advice -- I used to forsake everything, all in the name of music. Sleep, food, water, sanity, etc. But after taking a break from it, I realized that I needed to be more balanced in my approach, and it hasn't caused me health problems since I've been doing it in moderation. Yes, this is all good advice. Thanks for the post, Composer Organist :nod: Quote
HeckelphoneNYC Posted September 8, 2011 Posted September 8, 2011 Good advice indeed :) I've had some of these happen (re WINDS OFF THE ATLANTIC. lol!) but I've gotten over most of them! :) Quote
Austenite Posted December 9, 2011 Posted December 9, 2011 I had a huge problem getting adequate feedback for years - but then I found this site. My "development years" are long gone, however, so I might be crooked beyond repair :smithy: ... but I've always thought it's never too late. Quote
composerorganist Posted December 10, 2011 Author Posted December 10, 2011 It is never to late --- all you are doing is figuring out how best to say what you have always wanted in sound. Nothing else. Quote
Austenite Posted December 12, 2011 Posted December 12, 2011 It is never to late --- all you are doing is figuring out how best to say what you have always wanted in sound. Nothing else. Nice words of wisdom and encouragement! I wouldn't be here if I didn't think it would help me, despite I having embraced already some kind of 'style' I'm comfortable with... Quote
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