by Navron » 27 May 2012 16:48
The point of learning an instrument (as in taking lessons for one) is to learn the most efficient techniques to play that instrument, but even if you don't take lessons, you can still get quite good at an instrument by just fiddling around with it for a couple hours a day.
When it comes to piano, I end up tripping over my fingers a lot, because I never took piano lessons, but that won't stop me from creating some cool riffs and melodies to build a song around.
It's never good to develop bad habits though, especially with skill/finger technique. What I recommend is, once you create something good, take the time to slow it down, play it the most efficient way possible, and then slowly work the speed up.
Also, if you can't play it, don't pencil it in. I practice each section, arpeggio, chord, etc. until I can record it close to perfect, and fix up small errors. Penciling in parts you can't play doesn't help you improve your technique.
DAW: Cubase 6.5, Ableton Live 8
Preferred Genre: Industrial/Trance
Hardware: Schecter Diamond Series Bass, Yamaha Acoustic Guitar, BP355 Effects Pedal, Keystudio 49K Keyboard, Akai APC40, Korg nanoKEY2 25k Keyboard