I missed the hijacking part in the other thread, but glad this came out of it. Good questions so far, Nicole.
I try to address your questions as organized as possible. But of course, this is only my very personal view and I guess, all of these aspects are highly individual. But let me add one question in front of it:
What does it mean, making songs your own?
Well, basically while tackling a cover of a whole band song on your own, you will automatically make in your own. At least, as long as you only go for the you and your guitar approach. With good productions skills itās certainly possible to make a cover of a whole band version thatās very close to the original as a single person, though. But to my view, even then it will have (most of the times) some of its own flavour as weāre not robots hitting copy/paste. The grade of how much you could make it your own is the variable to me.
I think more or less right from the beginning, at least as soon as youāre able to strum through the songs.
That highly depends on the song and the direction you want to take it. Basic skills in rhythm guitar and/or accompaniment are a must for me, anything else really depends on what I mentioned beforehand.
For me, it is quite important to make covers my own. As mentioned beforehand, Iām mainly having the guitar-and-me-only-thing going on, so I canāt avoid making it my own.
But for instance, if you are part of a cover band playing gigs for people who want to here versions close to the original, thatās it what you should aim for. So also here, it highly depends on the purpose. If youāre doing it for yourself and enjoyment only, you can do whatever you like and donāt need to follow the same approach for each and every song as well.
Sometimes, even I aim to get as close to an original as I can (for songs that are mainly guitar and singing) when I like how itās done and add only a slight personal touch and variations. One of the songs Iām currently working on falls in this category being quite close to the original, but not a plain copy.
Need to break it down: Mostly, there is no clear vision in the beginning. Itās starting with experimenting and noodling around often.
To do that, for me it is important to understand the details of the original first and copying them a little. Then I leave this path and find my own way until I like it. So yes, itās basically trial and error for me.
Cool thread, you really made me think and reflect. Thanks Nicole.
Iām really looking forward to otherās views on this as well. Good points raised so far I totally resonate with (and needed much more words to express myself ).