TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Production Studio
-- Recommended to me by a pro
Recommended to me by a pro
http://www.theartistsway.com/pdfs/b...dcc952d90ffa9dd
It boils down to writing 3 pages of whatever you want when you wake up each morning and also reinvigorating your creativity with new inspiring things.
i seam to have read a book by the same title although it was a little longer. The higher power thing kinda killed it for me but the essence of creativity is to not judge when you are brainstorming ideas. Get as much done and keep the editing task separate from the creative task.
I tend to agree on some points but on others I don't. I think if you need to reach deadlines , this is the best approach. I do think that all the great master pieces were really thought out and over thought with the utmost criticism to yield a work of flawless geniality. Brahms first Symphony took 20 years.
Any way someone could paste the PDF into a DOC or TXT file for me?
For some reason when I open the file it comes out mutilated (text is all backward and large parts of it simply don't display).
try saving it and opening it with adobe reader. Or get a mac. chuckle.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Mad for Brad try saving it and opening it with adobe reader. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Mad for Brad i seam to have read a book by the same title although it was a little longer. The higher power thing kinda killed it for me but the essence of creativity is to not judge when you are brainstorming ideas. Get as much done and keep the editing task separate from the creative task. I tend to agree on some points but on others I don't. I think if you need to reach deadlines , this is the best approach. I do think that all the great master pieces were really thought out and over thought with the utmost criticism to yield a work of flawless geniality. Brahms first Symphony took 20 years. |
did a little voodoo on the pdf. Try this one
http://www.zshare.net/download/7948289421a97ecb/
also an rtf
http://www.zshare.net/download/7948292622fe9722/
the rtf is quite awkward but readable so try the pdf first.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Mad for Brad did a little voodoo on the pdf. Try this one http://www.zshare.net/download/7948289421a97ecb/ |
Meh, everyone is creative. I bet everyone of us has a top 10 hit song in their heads but the real problem is transcribing that idea into a track.
Sometimes something in my mind just clicks and I get an insane idea for a track and I quickly open Cubase and start working on it, but it never ever, ever comes out anywhere near as it was, when it was just an idea in my head. 90% of my time is spent not doing creative parts, but figuring out how to make a certain sound, how to mix these parts together etc... Basically; producing.
Don't believe me? Go back at your first projects just when you started fooling around at making tracks; yeah, it sounds like shit, but the idea is probably cool. You just didn't have the engineering ability to transcribe it from your mind to the track. And that's what I hope someday to achieve; so I can sit down and start a project and quickly toss together an idea I had and bring it as close to what it was in my head as possible. Without spending most of the time trying to figure out 'how'.
disagree,
some people are just creative. I think it is a give and take with other skills in life. Some people are practical and can function really well in the real world, some others are incredibly creative but lack a certain level of normal functioning. Tesla comes to mind.
There is a pretty discernible relationship between creative people and how nuts they are. People's brains are wired differently.
I think there are ways to reach your potential but that potential can vary vastly from person to person.Just like some people are fucking boring or absent of any sense of humour.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Mad for Brad There is a pretty discernible relationship between creative people and how nuts they are. People's brains are wired differently. |
Pic your great scientist, artist, musician � . I mentioned those that are extremely creative that don't quite function that well in the real world. Everyone has a degree of creativity and you don't have to be creative to make money in music. The point is that creativity just like aptitude varies vastly from person to person.
I can't give you a research as you would have to poll the entire planet and that isn't really feasible. I suppose I say it from both experience and my historical knowledge. Finding someone that is truly genius at something is usually always a little weird and quirky. It sort of comes with the territory. It does make sense. I mean to be great, you have to devote the time and just the isolation alone is enough to drastically change someone.
There was this book written about the association between manic depression and creativity:
http://www.amazon.com/Touched-Fire-Manic-Depressive-Artistic-Temperament/dp/068483183X
Just speaking generally, it has been documented that neurology patients with left side brain damage sometimes become very artistically creative after their injury or illness, even where they were not creative at all before (here is one instance). The left lobe is the logical deductive and impulse-inhibiting center of the brain, while the right is more free associative, imagistic, impulsive. What do lots of mental illnesses involve? Disinhibition and free association rather than logical planning and assessment of situations. So it makes sense that creative people might naturally have a bit less left dominance than most people do, making them seem a bit off (or way off) compared to the norm.
Back on topic...
That PDF was a good read. It's interesting that although she wrote it from the perspective of an author, she says that the "morning pages" method should help artists in other fields as well.
I wonder if this has anything to do with something I experienced: looking back, I remember that in the period when I was most consistently creative at music (late 2006, about four years ago), I was also doing lots of other creative stuff. I was taking a bunch of photos, messing around with abstract images in Photoshop, and writing a lot -- in addition to making music. So I figure either I was just more creative in general because of some non-artistic factor, or maybe getting into that "habit" of creativity in lots of domains helped me to make more music and caused me to be more productive than I've been before or since.
Strangely, I've found this to be true for myself.
I tend to be super creative when I'm angry/upset. Its a rather noticable difference actually.
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.