Music Notes – The Art and Science of Music

Written by on April 7, 2026

Music Notes – The Art and Science of Music – by Peak Music Studios.

Say No Three Times

People often ask what it takes to become a musician. The question usually circles around talent, natural ability, the right equipment, the right teacher, or the right opportunity. Those things can help, but they tend to distract from what actually moves someone forward. Becoming a musician comes down to something much less exciting and much more consistent than that, and it usually starts with a few clear decisions: not quitting when it gets hard, not staying where it feels comfortable, and not settling for doing just enough to get by.

A musician becomes a musician by doing the work over time. That means playing the instrument, practicing the passage that doesn’t quite work yet, writing the lyric even when it feels forced, and singing the note until it settles into place. It also means coming back the next day and doing it again, whether you feel like it or not. That part is where most people fall off, not because they can’t do it, but because they stop.

This idea has been around for a long time. Aristotle said, “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.” You don’t need philosophy to see it, though. Anyone who has stayed with a skill long enough recognizes the shift. What feels awkward at first starts to feel manageable. What once took full concentration becomes something you can control. That change doesn’t come from talent. It comes from repetition, and from sticking with something long enough for it to take hold.

One of the biggest things that gets in people’s way is the belief that successful musicians are simply the ones who were naturally gifted from the start. Early ability can make the beginning easier, but it doesn’t carry someone very far. At some point, everyone runs into the same wall, where progress slows down, and the work becomes less rewarding. The people who move past that point are not necessarily more talented. They are the ones who keep going when it stops being fun.

There is another pattern that shows up just as consistently. The musicians who continue to improve are also the ones who don’t settle into what is comfortable. Comfort in music can be very convincing because it sounds good. You are playing songs you know, running scales that sit easily under your fingers, and staying inside patterns that don’t give you trouble. It feels like progress, but it usually isn’t.

Real growth tends to show up somewhere else. It shows up in the passage that keeps falling apart, the rhythm that won’t quite lock in, the scale that feels uneven, or the note that takes more control than you currently have. Most people avoid those areas because they are frustrating and expose what isn’t working yet. The musicians who improve are the ones who spend time there anyway, not perfectly, but consistently.

Over time, that choice adds up. They build the habit of working on what actually needs attention instead of circling what already works. That is where the shift happens, not in dramatic moments, but in small decisions repeated often enough to matter.

If you want to become a musician, it helps to bring the question down to something immediate. Instead of focusing on where you want to be months from now, ask what the musician you want to become would do today. Then do that, even if it feels small or unimpressive. Play the scale that needs work, write a few lines of the song, slow the rhythm down, and get it right. Those actions do not look impressive on their own, but over time, they build something real.

Eventually, those repeated actions turn into habits, and those habits shape your ability. Along the way, you also have to learn when to say no, and not just once. The musicians who keep moving forward tend to make the same few decisions again and again. They do not quit when the work becomes frustrating, they do not stay in the comfort of what they can already do, and they do not accept a level of effort that keeps them in the same place.

This Month in Music History — April

April 3, 1968 – Otis Redding hits No. 1 with “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay,” recorded just days before his death. Sometimes the most relaxed vocal ends up being the most powerful, which is a good reminder that pushing harder is not always the answer. Letting the song breathe often carries more weight.

April 4, 1964 – The Beatles hold the top five spots on the Billboard charts at the same time. All five. It’s a useful reminder that great songwriting is usually built on simple elements that are executed well: strong melody, clear rhythm, and chords that support both.

April 7, 1770 – Ludwig van Beethoven is baptized in Germany. His music still challenges musicians today, which says a lot about the level of control and discipline behind it. Even in contemporary styles, that same level of precision shows up in a different form.

April 10, 1927 – Louis Armstrong records with his Hot Seven, helping shape modern jazz improvisation. His playing makes it clear that personality matters as much as technique. You can play all the right notes and still fail to communicate anything meaningful.

April 14, 1986 – Metallica releases “Master of Puppets.” Rhythm guitar at that level is physical and demanding, and it’s built through repetition and control over time.

April 16, 1971 – The Rolling Stones release “Sticky Fingers,” featuring “Brown Sugar” and “Wild Horses.” What stands out is the groove, and that kind of feel is something a band develops together.

April 21, 2016 – Prince passes away, leaving behind a body of work that continues to influence musicians. His career is a strong example of what happens when someone develops multiple skills instead of relying on just one.

 

 

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