I don't know about that. It's like vocabulary. Some people have small vocabularies, some have large vocabularies. But just because you have a large vocabulary doesn't mean you know anything about diction, and you might be a worse communicator than someone who has a lesser vocabulary but a good sense of what words to use. Nobody likes people who feel like they have to use the biggest words possible, but the fact remains, sometimes, you need THAT word to describe exactly what you're thinking, and you might struggle with expressing yourself unless you have the benefit of a larger vocabulary.Fran wrote:This sounds backward but you can have too much knowledge, there comes a point people cannot think outside the box because they've been schooled to do things how they should be done. If anything, players know more than they need to now, especially considering EVERYTHING is on the net.
I've had classical training since the age of 4, some years of jazz lessons, and it makes music so easy to decipher and comprehend. Music is easier than talking for me. Listening to it, understanding it, it's just so simple. Even when I hear supposedly really complicated stuff, it breaks down pretty easily for me. So when I'm actually writing a song or whatever, I feel like I don't restrict myself to what I can do, I just choose what seems appropriate to me. And 90% of the time, it's the simple and obvious choice that's right for me, but it's that 10% of the time when I feel that I do things that untrained/self-taught players wouldn't do because they just haven't been exposed to it.
I think there are multiple phases to musical knowledge for most people. At first, you do whatever, and you have a very unique and unusual style as a result. After a while, you develop some patterns, and you realize that there are some basic rules, and you follow them, but you don't know what they are. After that, you eventually learn how to express these things, like don't sing a minor third in a major key. Eventually, though, you come full circle and realize that all rules are meant to be broken and you should trust your instincts because at that point, you know what's right and wrong for you in that context. I feel like most guitarists are stuck in Phase 2. They'd be better off in Phase 1. And yeah, Phase 3 is not a good place to be, but ideally, you want to be in that last phase when you know every rule you're breaking and you're doing it anyway.