View Single Post
Old 10-29-2015, 08:19 PM   #41
fuzzyroes
Banned
 
Posts: 21,169
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by soniclovenoize View Post
I'm 35, and I noticed--as well as my peers who are also songwriters in their mid-30s--that once you hit 30, it becomes more difficult to write good material. You can still do it, but they are few and far between as compared to in your twenties.

I think there's two main reasons (in my experience):

1) You are older and have been doing this for a while, so you are more aware of becoming stagnant. It is hard to break stylistic patterns you created (maybe even mastered) ten years earlier, so in becoming aware of it, you second guess much of what you write. I can come up with a hundred catchy chord sequences and bullshit a fun melody and abstract lyric in five minutes. Will it be good? No because that's an avenue I already explored and it's time to move on, and to set that aside. In effect, there's less of what I perceive as "quality material" because of the time it takes to consciously redefine your own work. Which leads me to the next point...

2) In your 30s, you have to really face real life. 9-to-5 job, kids, a mortgage, bills, etc. I no longer have the time to sit and write songs when I have to wake up, get the kids to school, sit and work for 7 hours, feed kids, get them to soccer practice, then get them in bed--let alone trying to redefine your creative process in order to not become stagnant. This is the real reason you see hot new bands of kids in their twenties: that's the time of your life when you have less responsibilities, and you can just cash in your student loans and go on tour or whatever. Once you are in your thirties, it's time to grow up and be a manager at GC or something.

Just my $0.02
Definitely good points. But a lot of these artists that everyone enjoys do nothing for a living but music. They have endless time to really pour their hearts into it and think of ideas and noodle around in a creative mindset.

I'm starting to think that it's just the bloody grind of touring all of the time that wears down bands... They do it for so long and they just lose sight of what they enjoyed about it in the first place. And then they start to tie in touring with the new music and they just kind of begrudgingly do it, because they have nothing else to fall back on.

 
fuzzyroes is offline