Showing posts with label Failure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Failure. Show all posts
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Guitar Sling Gone Wrong
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Would you or someone you know like to go on a songwriting retreat with industry professionals? Visit SongbirdCamp.com for more details!
Monday, December 26, 2011
Quote of the Day - Cooley
"An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one."
- Charles Horton Cooley
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Would you or someone you know like to go on a songwriting retreat with industry professionals? Visit SongbirdCamp.com for more details!
Labels:
Artist,
Cello,
Charles Horton Cooley,
Failure,
Quote of the Day
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Byron Hill - On Mistakes
Labels:
Byron Hill,
Diligence,
Discipline,
Failure,
Music Business,
Music Starts Here,
Success
Thursday, June 30, 2011
The Perfect Song

That mindset, however, only leaves room for failure. Fear of failing is enough to stop a painting before the first brushstroke. Every song will fall short of perfection. What we need is a better understanding of how we define art as successful.
The pursuit of creating great art is less like aiming aiming an arrow at a bull's eye, and more like throwing a football through a tire. There is room for growth, as there is room for failure.
Keep writing,
Ben
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Would you or someone you know like to go on a songwriting retreat with industry professionals? Visit SongbirdCamp.com for more details!
Labels:
Failure,
Fear,
Football,
Perfection
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Scheduled Inspiration

There's nothing more draining than showing up somewhere like a co-write and feeling like you've somehow failed because you don't feel inspired or creative. I've been there. And I learned something very important as a result.
At first I thought the key was coming up with some profound musical or lyrical idea to bring to every co-write. But I quickly ended up with more co-writes than "profound" ideas.
Thankfully, one of the days that I was short on ideas was a day where my co-writer and I ended up writing one of my favorite songs to this day, "Bare Feet" (track #2 on my EP, The Way I See Her). What I came to realize was that, instead of my initial song idea delegating the direction, in this situation the song grew organically as a truer collaboration.
I've actually erred on the opposite side of the spectrum, showing up to co-writes more often than not without any song title or lyric idea. But I've also realized there's a certain level of creative accountability that comes with taking ideas to co-writes. If I know I want to take an idea, then I'll keep my antennae up for things that inspire. And as John Wooden said, “Failing to prepare meant preparing to fail.”
So to answer the original question about marking my calendar for inspiration, I do it by showing up ready to be inspired rather than showing up pre-inspired. And that mindset keeps the anxiety levels way down.
Keep writing (and preparing),
Ben
Labels:
Co-write,
Failure,
Inspiration,
John Wooden,
Preparation,
Rhythm,
Success
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