If you make music alone in a home studio (or mostly by yourself), you already know the feeling: one day you’re on a roll, the next day you stare at the same DAW screen and nothing happens. Creativity isn’t a faucet you can turn on and off at will — but it’s also not pure luck. With a few simple habits, constraints, and friendly rituals, you can make creative momentum more reliable. Below are practical ideas—part mindset, part workflow—that I use and recommend to students and colleagues. Try a handful, tweak them, and keep the ones that actually help you make more music. 1) Give creativity a schedule (but keep it playful) Treat creative sessions like appointments. Block 60–90 minute windows in your calendar and protect them. The pressure of a short, focused session often sparks choices and momentum you won’t get from an open-ended “I’ll work later” plan. That said, make at least one session per week a “no-expectations” jam—no goal, just exploration. Scheduled practice helps you ge...
Welcome! I'm Eric Peterson—indie recording artist, guitarist, composer, audio engineer, author, and cybersecurity pro from SLC. I create original music that blends progressive acoustic guitar with intricate melodies. This site is my creative hub, where I share my journey, latest works, streaming links, books, and projects that fuse soulful expression with innovative sound design. Explore my world of music and creativity!