Okay, a couple months ago, I started playing guitar and i am not THAT great, but i can play some stuff. A little while later, me and my friends were thinking about starting a band. All the pieces seemed to be falling into place after that, and so we got the parts down. They get their instruments soon and i already have mine. We are gonna start "practicing" and so forth near the beginning of 2005. I am gonna be the vocalist...
Any advise for us?
(btw, musical influences: Green Day, The Ramones, and Blink 182 are our main ones)
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Last edited by SnakeEyes on Dec 17th, 2004 at 03:21 AM
my advice would be try to write your own material, not do covers, that way you will be proud of what you guys play, and you will learn music at the same time!
thats what i did in my old band, but then im being a hypocryte as half our songs were covers! but writing your own stuff is satisfying.
Actually, I would think it would be a good idea to get more experience playing other people's music as a group, then start writing stuff later. If your friends don't even have instruments yet it's probably best that they learn to play them before you try to write anything
but then if you learn other peoples songs, you are trying to play to their ability level, while if you try to write your own shit, then you will playing at your level.
just start playing with your band the talent part will come as you go
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Pay attention to each other, instead of just trying to play your part without paying attention to what the rest (most importantly the drummer and bassist) are doing.
Also try to put some of your own input into the covers, like making slight changes in structure, improvising on guitar solos instead of playing them exactly like the band your covering etc.
That might be stuff for when youve advanced a little though, so basicely just practice a lot and try to play together at least once a week or so.
That sounds cool.If you don't have a name for the band I would call it Free Spring!Hope it turns out good.JM
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No... If you don't know how to play an instrument in the first place, you can't write music for it. You have to play other people's music at first, whatever the instrument is. I would think that would be obvious...
not at all, if you are learning music it doesnt mean you have to be playing covers, i learnt music without playing any covers, its called theory, scales and stuff.
i find covers dont really teach you anything, learning theory does.
both are good ways of learning, depending on you i suppose, covers didnt help me much for example, im was just saying that you dont HAVE to do covers to learn, just have a jam with your friends and you will probably write something cool by accident! thats what my band used to do!
Jamming will have very little use if you have little experience with your instrument. Jamming requires that you can improvise well and pay attention to each other. The chances on writing something cool (or something at all) at this stage are very small...
^Exactly what I'm trying to say. Theory will teach you quite a bit if you're learning an instrument on your own. (though I never did much of it to begin with... I picked it up later on, but the first thing I wanted to do was just play some damn music--I picked up guitar in the first place to play songs, not necessarily become a great technical player) Also, it is a standard thing that you learn to play music that's already been written before trying to write your own. When you start violin, you play scales for a while, and then they give you "Minuet No. 3" or some other simple piece of classical music. When you start playing guitar, you start with scales and chords, and then you might learn a Beatles song or something. Honestly, either you are amazingly talented, or the music was very crappy, because I could never write a song right after picking up a new instrument.