EmpUbermensch wrote:Yeah it's sounding like more and more of a good idea. However, I've always kind of had trouble finding inspiration for my melodies and whatnot, which might be part of why they sound "random" at points. So now I'm wondering, with the idea of keeping in theory in mind, where do you guys normally find inspiration when you're creating a melody?
I understand I should find my own inspiration for my music, but is there something specific you guys do? Is there some place you go that inspires you? I can spend all day at a keyboard, sounding chords and whatnot but I can never make a connection between the notes I can play and the overall sound of the song.
I guess what I'm saying is that I have a hard time getting multiple different melodies to mix together and sound good, which is a big part of composition. I can look at the piano roll and it looks like the two mesh but as soon as I play them together, it's incredibly dissonant. Thoughts? (I'm trying to subdue my frustration about this, as I get frustrated easily by things I'm not good at quickly ^ ^;)
I'm starting to think I simply might not have it in me to do music because it's so hard for me to get inspired by anything. My aunt is a musician herself, and she can come up with a whole melody from hearing a single sound, or from a picture. I, on the other hand have a hard time coming up with melodies even after hearing full songs. I dunno, as I said before I'm very easily frustrated by things I'm not good at, and this is a big one.
Time.
When you begin, you are very focused on the technical side of everything, trying to make things sound good. This is why you should learn fundamental theory. To the naysayers, let me explain what this means.
If you do not learn what a key is, what a scale is and what a chord is, you will get nowhere. I don't care if you learn it from a book, or a hip-hop producer who says "When y'all put them notes together they sound real good", you are learning theory. When you work out that chords sometimes sound even better with more notes in them, you are learning theory. When you play all the black notes, then find out that you can never play a wrong note on those,
you are learning theory. I cannot stress this enough.
People who say that it ruins their perception of music, that stints their creativity and forces them to follow rules are talking nonsense. I have five years of music theory, in all kinds of implementation, from simple popular works to complex orchestral scores, and I'm still learning. There is more to it than just scales and chords, and you can go very, very deep. But the fact is that if you do not learn this stuff, your music is going to sound samey and bland. You might get lucky once or twice, but you will hit a creative block.
Inspiration comes from knowing what sounds good. If you know how tonality works, chords, scales, keys and so forth, you can focus on an internal thought, an image, an inspiration to fit the mood. I worked on this from an early age, and grew an understanding of the above as quick as I could.
You mentioned something in your post that I find a little sad. You are feeling so disheartened that you want to give up. I think you should read the image I posted again. Don't give up. It will take time, you need to push yourself, learn all you can, and fight your way through this barrier, because this is only the first of many. There will always be barriers in your way.
Always. It's about having the determination, the dedication and the will to overcome those, to stick at what you do, keep trying. You will get through it, I promise, if you keep trying.