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Ask HN: How can I start making my own music?
2 points by dsc 5802 days ago
Every time I ask my friends about learning music they hammer me with lots of steps and ambiguity. So I did my own googling and found great instruments and lots of texts (either for the instruments or music theory).

It's a big mess. What's a good approach?

P.S. The accordion is awesome, but they also told me that it's "hard" too.

2 comments

Get a keyboard with USB connection to your computer, this will allow you to use it as a controller (a piece of hardware that can send input to software). Download some software like Logic Studio or FL Studio (John Boswell uses FL Studio, http://www.colorpulsemusic.com/, he's the one who did the Symphony of Science videos). Begin playing. You can easily create patterns to repeat, record yourself playing, record audio, compose visually and use any instruments and effects that you want. Even just Garage Band would be enough to get you started :)

You don't need a lot more than that. If you need any help setting it up, let me know.

Don't listen to people telling you something is hard or that you need to study some amount of theory before getting started. Find an instrument you like the sound of and play it.

Focus less on the tools and more on enjoying yourself.

What if I don't want to learn an instrument?

I'm interested in composition, not traditional performance. Is there a route to learning and making music without learning to play a physical, analog instrument?

Absolutely! The basic element is the same: you just need to figure out what part of the process you enjoy doing. The writing is one part, but there's also arranging, mixing, mastering, etc.

And it can help to have a basic understanding of an instrument but it's not specifically a requirement. For example you could download a software synth and start messing around with that. If you're sufficiently motivated, you could pick up an M-Audio USB keyboard for cheap.

And after finding the tool, is a teacher worthwhile or should I rely on self-teaching?
I had a classical guitar warm up guide which had an introduction by Robert Fripp. He included a short list of tips and one was that the value of finding a great teacher is that they can connect you to the culture of the instrument (I'm paraphrasing b/c I can't find any references). That's something that's difficult to replicate on your own.

That said, you can learn a lot on your own. There's no right or wrong approach so you should feel free to take the route you're most comfortable with.