How many of you folks actually play an instrument or have musical talent

How many of you folks actually play an instrument or have musical talent.
>plays euphonium, trombone and piano

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i cry alot

Bass, guitar, drums

i play drums and sing

i play cello, bass guitar and guitar, and i dont tell anyone this but i play uke to pick up them indie qt3.14s

Same but add Synthesiser and vox

the best insturment

This

>or have musical talent
Not really. Always played rhythm and can keep good time though so that's something

drums, mild guitar, trumpet in school, mild piano, mild bass

guitar/keys

compose classical, play jazz and blues, produce hip-hop because I love them

produce EDM because I'm in an EDM project with a friend of mine. I'm more the composer, he's the producer, and I record some guitar/keys for some songs

>euphonium

>gustav holst

Don't play any real instruments but I do mean mouth trumpet. Best way to keep yourself during long poops or roadtrips.

i cant play any instruments but ive made about 4 hours worth of stuff with fl studio and drum machines and had a few beats on an adult swim show if that counts for anything

it doesnt who am i kidding lol

I've spent hundreds of hours playing instruments with nothing to show for it if that counts for anything.

it doesn't who am I kidding lol

4 years of training on guitar
play guitar & synthesizer
record music and arrange with DAW as hobby :)

alrite smartass i get it

>piano
>guitar
>violin
>drums
who /masterrace/ here

My wife played viola in high school, and sold it to help move out on her own. Now she wants to get back into it. How can I go about finding a cheap, yet not-shit viola? Size 15.5.

>doesn't know any bass, brass, or woodwind

You are not /masterace/ because you lack a dedicated bass instrument, and can therefore not be a proper one man band.

Mandolin, Guitar, Bass, Piano, Violin, and sadly, Banjo.

I've never covered a Mumford and Sons song, don't worry.

>cheap
Good luck. Secondhand will be your best bet. Craigslist or similar, if the US has like secondhand sale websites that could work.

I play guitar, keys, sing, used to play trumpet and can record, produce and do sound design. My fave instrument is my laptop lately desu

probably join an adult orchestra

Piano and saxophone loser race here. Not good enough at piano to do any chamber stuff and
>saxophone
>classical music

>Instrument's evolution didn't evolve until after the civil war
>classical

pick one

Want to learn piano but I don't know if I'll enjoy it so I'm afraid of spending money on a keyboard/lessons and end up treating it like a new year' resolution gym membership. Any tips? Or should just avoid being an undisciplined cunt and go for it?

I sing, play harmonica, jaw harp & guitar I want to learn accordion.

Drums. Hope to learn keyboards and or synthesizers later on.

>he doesn't know

go for it. here's the old pasta for the piano general

pastebin.com/8t9AA4gB

We now live in hodunk nowhere, but I'll keep an eye out for those. Thanks peeps.

i rap and some people say i'm good at it.

Specialize in bass, but I can play some guitar, melodica, ocarina, a bit of Native American flute because my grandmother wanted me to, basic quijada, novice synth user, and some other stuff I don't feel like mentioning. I can write some music and read trombone sheet music as my talent, but I'm no one incredible.

The bigger cities will have music stores where you can try out several instruments, renting one for a few months to see if it's really what you want before you buy it.

If you're not excited at the prospect of learning I doubt you'll stick to it. imo piano is by far the hardest instrument to learn properly with rigorous muscle memory training and theory study. You need to be passionate for it

But hey, you might turn up to your first lesson and find out you really enjoy it

The prospect does excite me its just the begining that seems daunting and tedious. Then again, learning any skill worth learning is like that. I think I'll go for it. Any tips on where to start? Is it possible to learn by yourself or should I try lessons?

I've been self taught on guitar for 6 years. I reckon lessons are worth it for getting off the ground, developing the foundational basics properly. From there it's largely practicing and muscle memory, learning songs, memorizing keys and scales and chords, which can be done on your own.

I need lessons soon though, I don't think I'll actually get better than I am now til I do.

I'm okay at piano too, again self taught. Don't really learn songs, just pick a key and improvise. Wouldn't sell myself as a player though.

Anyway
Plenty of online resources too, free online lessons etc. but having one on one in the beginning is important at least

Thanks for the advice, user. I'm gonna look further into it.

>that seems daunting and tedious

It should be the opposite, starting to learn is fun. It's only when you have to actively practice and make meaningful progression that the hard work kicks in.

As for a teacher, it's up to you. They should be flexible to work with whatever knowledge and skillset you have. Can learn the basics by yourself just fine, but then I'd consider booking a block of lessons just to iron out any bad habits and instill some disciplined techniques to aid your practice.

I wish you luck, highly skilled pianists garner respect in a way no other musicians can.

Who here /clarinet/?
I also play bass clarinet and some percussion

I don't but I wanna bang a girl who does.

Trombone, bass guitar

depends on what you mean by "learn piano"

like do you want to play classical pieces or do you just want to write your own chord progressions? i'm self taught and i fall into the second category more.

either way, i recommend finding a list of scales and printing them out, then practicing them every day. figure out basic music theory too, like the circle of fifths and how to create chords. also, find some pieces you actually want to learn (doesn't really matter what it is) and practice it as much as possible.

if you've ever played an instrument before, it won't be AS difficult to pick up. i played instruments in high school so it only took a few weeks to get a few songs down.

if you actually want to learn difficult classical pieces, i recommend getting a tutor AFTER you've learned keys, chords, scales, and basic theory. those things can be self-taught but things like technique can not.

I played trumpet in middle/high school for ez credits

>sadly, Banjo

Nah I'd like a banjo.

Worried I'd just get bored within a few days and will have wasted a couple hundred bucks though.

I have this fear for a lot of instruments, only been playing guitar for about a year now. I haven't stopped at all, but I'm afraid to buy anything for fear of dropping it in a month.

Beginner skill level in trumpet and piano, enjoy singing though.

Piano/keys
Bass
Guitar (who doesn't play guitar though)
Mandolin

Not very good at mandolin though, the tiny frets are a pain in the ass

Pianist/keyboardist here. It helps a lot to have a clear sense of direction. What kind of piano do you want to play? Classical? Jazz? Something else? There are resources for almost any style, so if you can narrow down a genre (or multiple) you're interested in, it'll make it much simpler.

Don't be ashamed user. Mumford and Sons sounds pleasing to my ears, so it's good music to me.

10 years drums. I'm happy with what I can do.
My guitar could use some work though.

drums/percussion
classically trained, play a lot

I guess what I want to go for is learning classical piano pieces, but the begining is pretty much the same regardless of style right? Just basic theory and muscle memory exercises.

Also, would it be best then to first learn the basics before seeking a teacher.

Violin, Piano

Guitar, piano, violin, drums a little bit, and I dabble in many other instruments but not enough to say that I really play them.
I have an okay singing voice I guess
I would say that I have considerable musical skill

You won't be specialising for a long while lol don't worry.

sax, violin, piano, mandolin

I play guitar and FL Studio

Mandolin was my first instrument. Picked it up off some hippy while hitchhiking. Never stopped to consider having giant hands would make it difficult. Feels bad cause I love that little bastard.

As if bass guitar is hard given that you already play normal guitar. It takes twenty minutes tops to get used to the differences.