I'm literally at the point of wanting to get music out there that I'm just going to throw on a drum track and just play some random sounds. I haven't been active lately and I've never really been one to learn someone else's songs because I want to write my own. Is it wrong to not learn a cover song? I mean I have learned some songs but not to completion. Just trying to see how other people feel about playing cover songs. Any input is appreciated thanks
Hey man. It depends!
A few reasons why people learn cover songs:
1. Sense of achievement - To be able to play something exactly like, if not, close to what your idols are playing. It gives us the motivation that we are one step closer to them.
2. Learning point - some people, including myself, take it as an exposure to familiarize myself with how different guitarists play, and it allows us to somehow get an idea of why, for example, a certain guitarist does this technique when it could be done in another. It's like how you'd say Kirk Hammett and Dimebag both plays metal, but what makes them sound different than the other? and the list goes on.
For me, personally, I clung on to A7X's solos and Syn's style for a good first quarter of my guitar playing and when I was doing adlib, my friends were able to tell that I was heavily influenced by Syn. Shortly after, I started picking up from others like Paul Gilbert, Steve Vai, Joe Satriani, John Petrucci, among the few. My friends who've seen me from the start of my journey praised me for the versatility, although it's not really original, because my main inspiration is Syn, but Syn's inspirations come from the names I mentioned earlier, so my 'style' didn't go too far off simple because of the chain of inspirations down Syn's alley.
Asides from covering songs from songs that have guitar, regardless of genre, I play along to melodies from a lot of songs ranging from metal/rock to even mainstream pop/k-pop music. I try to imitate the dynamics of the vocal lines and it helped me to discover techniques that I may have heard or seen played on a guitar, and some, never before!
So this is just my fair share from experience
To conclude, there's no right or wrong. It's just a matter of how much exposure you have. If you have a decent music theory education, sometimes it's still best to expand the knowledge and learn from the existing guitarists, and same goes for those who are self-taught - it doesn't hurt to try learn a little bit of theory here and there.
All-in-all, it's just a matter of how much you gain as a guitarist. The more you know, the better. Paul Gilbert is a fine example of someone who picks up a lot of his technique and inspiration from bands and guitarists he listens to, and also theoretically. That man never once not speak without mentioning where he plucks his inspirations out from.
Cheers!