Reisty is absolutely right.Reïst wrote:My personal thoughts are that anyone can play an instrument, and if that person is a songwriter, good things happen.
I didn't really 'play' any instruments on my song this wek. It is almost all (slightly tweaked) AppleLoops.
The only "real" instrument is a ukulele - but I'm not 'really' playing it. Basically, my daughter has rendered my ukulele unplayable (it is actually her 'guitar'). To get the ukulele strumming sound, I recorded four separate tracks of me playing a two note riff, one string at a time. This 4 second sample (only 2 actual notes, plucked 4 times each) was then looped through the rest of the song To do the chord change bit, I had to re-tune the uke and do it all again. It is a technique that a complete non-guitarist could do easily.
Many of my songs contain similar non-guitar playing. I often record just one single strummed chord - then loop it and pitch shift it into a song.
Not being able to play a guitar is absolutely no excuse for not playing a guitar. (and this applies for every musical instrument - I can't wait to get started working on songs with my new sitar).
Eric, there is absolutely no reason to apologise for simplistic music - but don't let it limit you. Just grab some instruments and see what noises you gan make with them - buy a toy ukulele or harmonica, borrow a guitar, whatever. You're writing good songs - that's the hard bit covered, filling in the music is the fun part.