tinker

My Dearest Tortured Composer,

In my last message, I told you about the importance of volume.

Writing enormous quantities of bad music. Making your mistakes out loud. Keeping going anyway.

And I promised I’d tell you about the mindset that makes all of that actually possible.

Here it is.

But first, I want you to look at something.

Look at that hot mess. That’s a picture of Steve Jobs in his home office.

Papers everywhere. Projects in various states of completion. Organized chaos in every direction.

Now, this is a man who was arguably one of the greatest creative minds of the last century.

And his office looked like a raccoon vomited out creative genius all over the place.

This was not an accident.

You see, many composers I speak with have listened to too much Chopin.

Too much John Williams.

And they sit down to write with the assumption that their music needs to come out perfect.

Failing to realize that the music they’re hearing was made by people at the absolute peak of their creative careers.

Music that went through dozens, sometimes hundreds of iterations before it became what they heard.

And this assumption leaves them stuck.

Because they believe that the first idea needs to come out totally perfect.

And even worse, they take what I’d call a “completionist” mindset.

They think they need to finish every single idea they start.

This leaves them rigid.

Every idea becomes precious. They NEED every idea to be THE idea. Because starting something means committing to finishing it, and finishing it means it will be judged, and being judged means…

You know how this goes.

So they start very few ideas. And the ones they do start get twisted and contorted and edited into oblivion trying to make them perfect.

Pressing the gas and the brake at the same time.

There’s a quote from Brian Eno that I love:

“Up until a deadline, it’s an experiment. It’s sitting on my shelf and I can take it down again as I often do, work on it again, put it back on.”

That is the mindset.

Nassim Taleb calls it “tinkering.”

In his book Antifragile, he argues that most innovation throughout history came not from institutions or laboratories or grand theoretical plans.

It came from individual people messing around on their own. Getting their hands dirty. Putting some elbow grease into it. Throwing some paint up against the wall.

He defines tinkering as a localized, decentralized form of trial and error that produces small manageable errors and large asymmetrical gains.

Small downside. Massive potential upside.

Sound familiar?

Picture an old man in a workshop with a dozen projects scattered across every surface. Something being glued over here. Something being sanded over there. An idea he started three months ago sitting in the corner waiting for its moment.

He is not demanding that everything get finished.

He is not precious about any single project.

He is just… tinkering.

And this is exactly how I’d encourage you to approach your composing.

Have an inkling of an idea? Test it out. Give it a whirl. Give her a spin, you filthy little composer. Make that silly little thing you’ve always thought, “I wonder how that would sound.”

Start a few 8 bar phrases in a new style you’ve been curious about. Orchestrate one of them. Try orchestrating another one differently. See what happens when you put them next to each other.

Most of it won’t go anywhere.

And that is entirely the point.

Because the ones that do go somewhere, the ones where something lights up inside you and you think “wait, what was THAT”…

Those are the ideas worth pursuing.

I am not saying you should never finish anything or never plan.

What I am saying is you probably want to start significantly more ideas than you finish.

Steal from everything. If you’re writing classical music, steal a bass line from an 80s synth pop track. Steal rhythms from Brazil. Throw it together and see what happens.

And pay attention. When something stands out, when something feels alive, go with it.

That is your voice trying to show itself.

The key to developing something truly original is doing an enormous amount of this tinkering. Trying out countless iterations and combinations. Small experiments everywhere. Low stakes. High curiosity.

InklingMaxx. IdeaMaxx. TINKERMAXX.

Next week I’ll tell you a horrifying, disgusting story about a composer who did not have the luxury of saying no to work he hated.

And the moment with his mother-in-law that still keeps me up at night.

Until then remember…

The world waits for your music…

-Luke

At Tortured Composer’s Society, it’s our mission to create and provide a community that helps you live a more creative and fulfilling life as a composer. When Tortured Composer’s Society was established in 1685 (or thereabouts), we wanted to make the community an inclusive, welcoming table where everyone can come to overcome their creative blocks and thrive as composers.

We believe that every composer, from the bedroom producer to the concert hall maven, deserves a place to explore their craft without judgment. Our community understands the unique challenges of staring at blank manuscript paper at 3 AM, the peculiar torture of hearing a melody in your head that refuses to translate to the page, and the specific type of existential crisis that comes from comparing your work to Bach’s while eating cold pizza in your pajamas.

We will always aim to get better at what we do every single day. This means constantly refining our understanding of what makes composers tick, what makes them stuck, and what makes them suddenly breakthrough at the most unexpected moments. We study the patterns of creativity, the psychology of artistic blocks, and the practical realities of making music in a world that often doesn’t understand why you need absolute silence to hear the French horn line in your head.

In addition, our primary focus is on our relationship with you. This isn’t about broadcasting generic advice into the void. It’s about understanding the specific flavors of torture that each composer experiences. Some of you are tortured by perfectionism. Others by comparison. Still others by the haunting suspicion that maybe you should have become an accountant like your mother suggested. We see you. We understand you. We’re here for all of it.

This way, every time you hang out with us, you end up getting an idea that takes your compositions to the next level. Sometimes that idea is a technical solution to a thorny orchestration problem. Sometimes it’s permission to write something terrible. Sometimes it’s just knowing that someone else out there also had to Google “what note is the open G string on a violin” for the hundredth time.

We particularly appreciate when our following provides feedback via testimonials, reviews, and comments left on our site or social media accounts. Your stories of breakthrough moments, creative disasters, and everything in between help shape our understanding of the composer’s journey. When you tell us about the time you accidentally wrote a fugue in your sleep, or when you finally understood what secondary dominants were after years of confusion, these stories become part of our collective knowledge base.

Because with that feedback, we can use it to make your next newsletter even better than the last. We’re constantly refining our approach based on what resonates with you. Did a particular analogy finally make modal interchange click? Did a creative exercise unlock something you’d been struggling with for months? We want to know about it.

Since we put so much effort into the relationship with you, we hope that any investment in us is exactly the way you hoped it would be. Whether that investment is your time reading these emails, your emotional investment in trying our exercises, or eventually perhaps joining our community in a more formal way, we take that trust seriously.

Because by choosing to go with Tortured Composer’s Society, it’s our promise that we provide a community you will fall in love with over and over again. A place where your creative struggles are understood, where your small victories are celebrated, and where someone will always understand why you’re excited about discovering a new chord voicing.

Now, as much as we care about making the world more musical and more creative, we also care about your privacy. In an age where every click is tracked and every preference is monetized, we believe your creative journey should remain yours. We’re committed to the right to your privacy and strive to provide a safe and secure user experience.

Our Privacy Policy explains how we collect, store and use personal information, provided by you on our website. We don’t sell your information to companies who want to market sample libraries to you (though honestly, you probably already have too many). We don’t share your struggles with perfectionism with companies selling meditation apps. Your creative journey is your own, and we’re simply honored to be a small part of it.

It also explains important information that ensures we won’t abuse the information that you provide to us in good faith. When you tell us about your compositional challenges, your victories, your preferred DAW, or your secret love of parallel fifths, that information stays with us.

By accessing and using our website, you can trust that what you want to be kept private, will be kept private. Your unfinished symphonies, your experimental phase with serialism, that time you tried to write a rap opera, all of it remains confidential.

If at any time, you would like to read our Privacy Policy and get a better understanding of your rights and liabilities under the law, feel free to visit our site, find the privacy policy in the footer and read it. It’s written in plain English, not legalese, because we believe you should actually understand what you’re agreeing to.

If there is something you are concerned about or wish to get more clarity on, please let us know by contacting us at [email protected]. Whether it’s a privacy concern, a creative question, or just wanting to share your latest compositional triumph, we’re here for it.

The Privacy Policy also informs you of how to notify us to stop using your personal information. If you decide that our particular brand of compositional torture isn’t for you, we make it easy to step away. No hard feelings. The world of music is vast, and everyone must find their own path through it.

If you wish to view our official policies, please visit our website TorturedComposers.com. There you’ll find not just policies, but resources, exercises, and a growing collection of stories from composers just like you who are navigating the beautiful, terrible, wonderful world of music creation.

Remember, composing is not just about the notes you write. It’s about the journey of becoming someone who writes those notes. Every struggle, every breakthrough, every moment of doubt and every moment of clarity, they’re all part of the process. We’re here to make that process a little less lonely and a lot more fun.

The world waits for your music, but there’s no rush. Take your time. Make mistakes. Write garbage. Write gold. Write everything in between. We’ll be here for all of it.