Why Farmers Work Smarter Than Composers

No—it’s not about waking up before sunrise.

But it is about how you use your time.

If you’re like most composers, when you sit down at your desk or think about what you’re going to work on tomorrow, you probably think some variation of “It’s time to compose!”

You may get a little more specific, like “I need to write this passage” or “that movement” or “this cue.”

But generally that’s where it stops.

You leave it to your intuition to fill in the blanks of “what do I do next?”

Sometimes that works fine, but too often it leads us into an unnecessary panic of “Wait! I don’t actually know what I’m doing!”

Farmers Have Been Using This Simple Trick for Centuries

Consider the farmer.

They don’t wake up and say, “It’s time to farm!”

Even those of us with minimal manual labor experience know how silly that sounds.

Instead, the farmer has a clear routine:

  • Feed the pigs

  • Milk the cow

  • Let the chickens out of the coop

  • etc.

These are specific tasks.

They wake up. They know exactly what they have to do. They go do it.

They may be tired or have personal concerns, but they have no stress or worry over “What should I do next?”

But too often as composers, in our quest for originality and relevance, we grossly underplay just how repetitive our work actually is.

How You Can Work Smart, Too

👉 Here’s the secret: naming your composing tasks makes creativity easier and more fun.

Yes, I recognize that composing is a creative process.

Yes, this means that our work rarely comes in the order of “A, B, C, D, . . .”

Yes, more often looks like “11, C, 2, 3, D, E, X, 8, 4, nine, . . .”

But just because the ordering of these tasks is often nonlinear does not mean that the tasks themselves are not discrete and definable.

The composition equivalent to farm chores would be things like:

  • Draft this 8-bar melody

  • Devise 3 or 4 ways to harmonize it, then pick one

  • Brainstorm several different ways of arranging it for the ensemble

  • Execute that arrangement

  • etc.

Because of mental simulation, when you can identify what you’re trying to do, it makes it so much easier for your intuition/your inspiration/the muse/whatever-you-want-to-call it to do its work.

So here is my invitation to you today:

  1. List out the composing tasks you know how to do.

  2. When it comes time to compose, identify 1–3 specific tasks you want to accomplish

Again, identifying these tasks does not mean you must work rigidly or robotically.

But, like a farmer, it will help you work smart and give you a clear starting point.

Previous
Previous

The Courage to Commit

Next
Next

Fact: Your Brain Thinks Music Is a Horror Film