Listening to Music Every Day

I was recently listening to an interview with guitarist JD Simo where he expressed surprise that some of the professional guitarists he knew didn’t really seek out new music to listen to or didn’t even listen to much music at all. He said that he listens to new music all the time.

It was surprising to hear that professional guitarists don’t uniformly listen to music all the time. But, after evaluating my own listening habits it may not be that surprising after all. Professional guitarists are no different than the rest of us. And I realized that I don’t listen to much new music either.

Somewhere along the way, music slowly shifted from being something I actively pursued to something that mostly filled the background. I’d put on familiar albums while doing other things, but I rarely sat down with the intention of discovering something new. When I did listen, it was usually to the same artists and records I’d listened to for years.

However, when I first started playing guitar, I did listen to music all the time. I listened to music I loved, but I also actively sought out new and different music to listen to. Finding new music I enjoyed was exciting. It seemed like something inside of me was unlocked when I found new music that really resonated with me.

Back then, finding new music meant listening to the local radio stations and trolling the local record stores. In fact some of my friends from that time period were people I met at the record stores because I was there so much.

Over time, of course, the record stores started closing. That feeling of hanging out with like-minded people and seeing what new music had come out that week kind of got lost. I’m glad to see the vinyl resurgence has helped some of the record stores stay in business, but it isn’t quite the same.

That being said, the ability to find and discover new music is unparalleled today. We have nearly the entirety of recorded music history a few clicks away. So, why are we all not listening to new music all the time?

I think it’s important to continue to seek out new music. As guitar players, we are the sum of what we’ve heard. Listening to the same music over and over will lead to playing the same things over and over. Listening to different genres or different eras of music can lead to some new ideas. I know it often does for me.

After realizing that I haven’t been doing this as much over the past few years, I’ve been trying to get back to that feeling of discovering new music. Each day I’m trying to listen to something I haven’t heard before. It doesn’t have to be brand new music. In fact, I recently went down the rabbit hole of 80s industrial music, much of which I’d never heard before.

I’m trying to actively listen to new music again. I’ve found some of the excitement that I used to have around music, and it’s been a lot of fun.

If you’ve found yourself in the same rut of listening to the same music you always have or not listening to much music at all, I would encourage you to seek out something new. A new artist, a new genre, or even just a new record you haven’t heard from a band you enjoy. Hopefully, it will give you some new inspiration.

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