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Everyone Argues About Tools While No One Listens to the Music

Everyone Argues About Tools While No One Listens to the Music
Photo by Ben Blennerhassett on Unsplash

As a software developer, I've watched people spend years arguing about programming languages, frameworks, and tech stacks.

Java versus C#.
React versus Angular.
Linux versus Windows.
Tabs versus spaces.

Entire careers have been spent fighting ideological wars over tools. And yet when the client receives the finished product, they usually ask only one question:

"Does it work?"

They don't care whether the backend was written in Go, Rust, C#, or Java. They don't care whether you used React, Vue, Angular, Svelte, or whatever framework became popular this month. They care that the application solves their problem.


Music isn't that different. Most listeners don't care whether the song was made with analog hardware, a laptop, a DAW, a synthesizer, or AI. They don't care whether the lead sound came from a handcrafted patch or a factory preset. They don't care how many hours were spent debating what constitutes "real art."
They care about one thing:

Did the song make them feel something?
Did they connect with the lyrics?
Did the melody stay in their head?
Did it help them through a difficult day?
Did it make them want to hit repeat?

The audience experiences the result, not the process.

That's not an argument against craftsmanship. Craftsmanship matters. Skill matters. Experience matters. But somewhere along the way, many industries become obsessed with the tools instead of the outcome.

Developers fight over frameworks.
Musicians fight over production methods.
Artists fight over mediums.
Writers fight over technology.

The argument changes. The pattern stays the same.

Every generation invents a new reason why the latest tool is illegitimate. Every generation predicts the death of creativity. And every generation is eventually proven wrong.

The printing press didn't destroy writing.
Photography didn't destroy painting.
Synthesizers didn't destroy music.
DAWs didn't destroy musicianship.
The internet didn't destroy creativity.

And AI won't destroy it either.

What destroys creativity is spending more time attacking other creators than creating something yourself. If you genuinely believe you have something special to offer the world, focus on your work.

Write better songs.
Build better software.
Paint better paintings.
Tell better stories.

The people who leave a lasting mark on their craft rarely spend their days organizing pitchfork mobs against the newest technology. They're too busy creating. The next time you feel tempted to burn down someone else's house because they're using a tool you don't like, ask yourself a simple question:

Could that energy be spent building something of your own instead?

Because history remembers the builders far more often than it remembers the gatekeepers.
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