4
by Mason
I'd really taken to this Fisher-Price xylophone piano I was given as a toddler, so by age 3 I was in piano lessons. Took them up through high school, got my RCM Grade 8. But I was an uncommitted student and always kind of sucked at it. I have kind of innate musical ability, absolute pitch and such (neutral statement, do not mean to boast), but never worked to properly develop it. On my RCM exams I'd always get 10/10 on the ear training portion, routinely 3 or 2/10 for sight-reading, and middling grades on the actual performances/pieces. Those are the only music lessons I've taken besides about six weeks of voice as an adolescent (I still can't reliably sing "from my diaphragm").
My dad played a little guitar and I was almost always more interested in the guitar than the piano. I was given a child-size classical guitar from Sears for Christmas when I was maybe six. I got my first electric guitar and amp for Christmas as well, I was in Grade 5 I think. I've played continuously since then, although in those 20 years I don't think I've ever played a scale or any other intentional rudiment/exercise on the guitar.
Picked up a Peavey drum kit for $100 about when I started high school. Parents vetoed that after a week just from the noise, but they liked the general idea so they bought an old Yamaha digital drum kit my friend was selling. So I just hit that a bunch til eventually I could marginally play the drums. The digital kit gave me almost no transferable playing skills for my eventual acoustic kit (other than the obvious one of knowing which drums are which), but it helped a lot in learning to understand/write drum parts.
I think drums are the only instrument where it would really behoove me to take one or two lessons. Since I an instrument where poor form/ergonomics can fuck you up. I used to have a problem where if I played anything shorter than quarter notes on the hi-hat, my arm would go numb. That doesn't happen anymore, but I should get a more experienced drummer to give my technique a once-over.