Tom_Cruise wrote: » I always assumed that talent was something that you are predominantly born with and through proper training you can hone your skills. I have read two books lately that take the position that a specific talent is not something you are born with or inherit, but a skill that can be learnt through hours upon hours of focused practice. What are your views on this? Can anyone become say, a world class violin player if they are start young, get proper tuition and work hard etc?
dxhound2005 wrote: » I vaguely remember seeing someone on TV years ago propounding that theory and being impressed by the argument. But as with lots of other things in life there is probably not a one size fits all. Were you convinced by what you read in the two books?
Tom_Cruise wrote: » Can anyone become say, a world class violin player if they are start young, get proper tuition and work hard etc?
Agricola wrote: » I think so yes. The one thing that all world class anythings have in common is that they started very young and completely through themselves into it. And pushy parents who do almost anything to support them are also a common part of it. I don't think Tiger Woods had any special golf gene that got him to where he is/was (Is he still good, I dont know!) He spent ridiculous amounts of time honing his game, ate properly, trained his body fully. He basically worked hard on everything to get to the top, and often went above and beyond what other pros considered to be required. Same with Beckham and freekicks. Same with Maradona and ball control. Its all immense dedication and repetition that gets them there.
The_Nipper_One wrote: » I got pretty good at the guitar when I was in my teens, playing fast solos over the back of my head type stuff. People used to say I was talented, and my other friends who played the guitar casually used to always ask how I did X and Y. The truth is, talent is just something other people see at a certain point of advancement in anothers skill. The first time I sat down with a guitar I was no better than anyone else. People saw Talent in me because for every hour they saw me play, they didn't see the 100 hours of practice behind it leading up to that point. They didn't see the 12 hour sessions of sitting with headphones on going through speed and accuracy drills. The real thing that matters to be good at something is not talent, it is a real LOVE which allows you to sit in sollitude and BECOME GOOD at something through focused dedicated practice. What was very enlightening to me through becoming good at the guitar is the way we can sometimes trick ourselves into thinking we want to be good at something, and then when motivation strays we think we're useless and untalented. The truth is that it's far more likely we just didnt want it enough.
Latchy wrote: » A lot of people who made it in the music industry had natural talent but they needed luck ,to be in the right place and somebody with money and influence to expose and exploit them to the world . The most obvious example would be Brian Epstein and the Beatles .
gurramok wrote: » Thought you were gonna say Jedward there
StudentDad wrote: » How does that saying go? Success is 10% talent and 90% hard work.