I am an enthusiastic, if very limited, “musician”. I don’t think of myself as a musician – and neither does anyone else! I’ve never been able to read music properly, I’ve never had a lesson and I am certainly no virtuoso on any instrument. But music means quite a lot to me, and not just something to listen to when driving.
As I said in a previous post, much of the fun is about playing with other people, i.e. being part of a team. This summer Frank and I (we had met only three or four times before) got together after a few hours’ practice to play some songs for a friend’s 60th birthday in France. Various people, such as Robyn here, joined us, as and when they felt moved to do so.

It would be nice to be able to play better and to have a stronger singing voice, but to be able to play at all is a lot better than nothing. And with arthritis kicking in, no amount of practice is going to turn me into a great guitarist now.
A lot better
If you can play even a few songs, you have something to share .
My grandparents, like so many of their generation, possessed an upright piano that stood forlorn in the freezing Glasgow front room kept for best, waiting for someone to arrive and play it. I don’t think either of them ever played it – at least I never heard them do so. It must have been purchased for my father.
I remember, and Dad reminded me of it last weekend, a summer holiday when all the guests were sitting in the lounge of a small hotel (not Fawlty Towers, though I believe it was in Torquay) looking at the “old joanna” and waiting for someone brave enough to play it. Dad said, somewhat reluctantly, that he’d have a go. He couldn’t recall many songs without the music but he could sight-read reasonably well. He leafed through a couple of books and found a few things he could play. He’d be the first to say that he was never a great musician (we have something in common, after all), but no-one else was prepared to step up, and it made a dull evening more enjoyable.
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There are plenty of talentless, or almost talentless, people who’ve done OK for themselves. One that leaps, literally, to mind is John Otway, whom I remember paying to see twice in the early 80s, including at the legendary Eric’s Club in Liverpool. The fact that he couldn’t sing, wasn’t much of a guitarist, and wrote songs of – how shall I put it? – a variable quality, did not prevent him from building up a cult following which survives today. As does he.

At least you were in for a memorable night
On the other hand, there are many people, and I have known one or two, who are quite talented but too shy to perform in public. It is something worth persevering with, because you will get over it eventually.
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A huge amount has been written about the psychological power of music, whether as therapy, or as a way of turning people’s lives around. Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain by Oliver Sacks is full of fascinating, incredible stories, and I recommend it.

I don’t have any knowledge of neurology. I am just claiming that playing music – even at the most basic level – is always a creative process where enjoyment can come from something as simple as strumming the same guitar chord over and over again with all the strings in tune, just as artists may adore the colour and consistency of a particular paint. Add in the elements of learning and collaboration, and I find it strange that not everyone wants to have a go.

As for making a living from music – that’s something I’m even less qualified to talk about. But I suspect – as with everything you have to do for a living – that it’s rarely as much fun.
Since you’ve read this far, I will treat new to a new One for the Wall recording that we are happy with called “Cowboys and Astronauts”.
I quite agree, me old mate!!
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It’s the passion that matters. 😊
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