Serve The Song

A blog about songwriting, production, and promotion

The Freedom of Limitation

by Aaron Cheney  |  July 27, 2009  |  6 Comments
Photo by And-rey

Photo by And-rey

For artists the battle has always raged between the desire for complete artistic freedom and the need (economic or otherwise) to work within a limiting set of rules. While some insist that creativity and limits are mutually exclusive, I would argue the opposite: people are never more creative than when forced to work within limitations. Limitations generate their own kind of creative freedom.  They force original thinking - the wellspring of creativity.

As musicians and songwriters we face limitations all the time. They fall into two broad categories: those that are thrust upon us, and those that are self-imposed. In both cases musicians and artists have used these limitations as a springboard to new avenues of thought and art.

Limits Thrust Upon Us

Inadequate equipment, musical ignorance, commercial necessity, and popular expectation are examples of limitations that are often beyond the immediate control of an artist. A poor guitarist may only be able to afford a budget instrument.  A musician with a love for jazz may need to perform pop to find an audience. A beginning recordist may only have a single dynamic microphone.  Within each of these challenges lies the opportunity for creative thinking.  Perhaps the guitarist can develop a new technique or sound to exploit his less-than-ideal instrument. Perhaps the musician can find a way to incorporate jazz into his pop songs. Perhaps the recordist can discover new sounds by using his single microphone in ways others have never tried before.

The lesson is simple: if you are faced with limitations that you cannot easily overcome, work around them. Don’t waste time pining for an expensive microphone, the newest VST plug-in, or a better keyboard. Instead look for creative ways to use what you have now. Don’t wait for the people’s musical tastes to change. Instead, find a way to merge your personal musical goals with what an audience wants. Limitless creative freedom is not necessary for you to make good music today. Exploit what you have now, while looking for ways to move towards your end goal.

Limits Self-Imposed

Often you can enhance your creativity with a self-imposed set of rules. A limitless number of choices can sometimes cause an artist to freeze up - a condition sometimes called “option anxiety” or “analysis paralysis”. Limiting your creative options allows you to focus more keenly in a specific creative direction. Sometimes this can be as simple as writing in a specific genre or song form. Other times the limitation itself becomes a creative choice.

Here are two examples of self-imposed creative limitations:

Alphabetic Africa by Walter Abish is a book in which the first chapter consists entirely of words beginning with the letter “A”. Each successive chapter ads words beginning with the subsequent letter of the alphabet, until at last the author is free to use all words. Then the chapters begin a backwards progression, until finally the author is forced to conclude as he began; using words that begin only with “A”.

Three Thieves’ Tale by…well….me, is a poem I wrote using a similar alliterative constraint. With a lot of thought I was able to create an entire poem that made sense, told a cohesive story, and even rhymed (loosely), using only words that began with the letter “T”.

Think Creatively

We’re all artists, right? Artists are supposed to be creative thinkers, right? Let’s embrace our limitations as an opportunity problem-solve creatively. I maintain that looking for creative solutions to “limitations” is where some of man’s greatest art has come from.  I’ve already shown how I used a limitation to come up with something cool. How have you? Bring it.

Aaron Cheney is an artmusicwords guy living in Seattle, WA.

www.aaroncheney.com


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6 Comments:


  1. 07/28/2009
    11:19 am

    Karen

    Hi Aaron. Another way that limitations help is to give you ideas. When you can write a song about anything in any style with any length with any instruments, it can be a bit daunting. But if you’re writing for a contest, and there has to be a certain theme, then that can be easier because it focuses you.


  2. 07/29/2009
    3:28 pm

    Joe Gilder

    Great article! I’ve been thinking about this a lot, and I’m always REALLY surprised when I see the creativity that shows up when I impose some limitations on myself.

    If you’ve never done it before, give yourself a “1-Hour Challenge.” Set a timer for one hour and try to completely record and mix a song during that time frame. I did it, and it was pretty fascinating. You can check it out here:

    http://www.homestudiocorner.com/2009/07/11/one-hour-challenge/


  3. 07/29/2009
    3:39 pm

    Nick Maxwell

    This was a really inspiring read, and is along the same lines of what I often recommend to sound designers and musicians that are paralyzed by options. I also need to take my own advice :)


  4. 08/3/2009
    11:39 am

    ESP

    I guess the basic gist of what your posting here is that there’s always a limit to art to make art feasible. And broadening. And great.


  5. 01/22/2010
    11:29 am

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