Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
For me, each time I'm on stage, each time I'm working on a new album, it's like a dream. I can't believe it's happening.
I've never done an album in the same place really - I like to be able to remember where I did every single one of them .
There's an album by Antonio Carlos Jobim - the album with 'The Girl From Ipanema.' That's the most seductive music ever.
All of my favourite albums have this incredible amount of conceptual glue to them, even if they are not telling a story.
Nobody ever sees this part,” I said. “It doesn’t matter if it’s pretty.” “So it’s like track six on an album,” Cole said.
I don't do something because I think it will sell 30 million albums. I couldn't care less. If it sells one, it sells one.
I'm a big collector of vinyl - I have a record room in my house - and I've always had a huge soundtrack album collection.
Japanese movie "Be With You" served as inspiration for "Love Box." I couldn't fill up the album with just my experiences.
When I was young, I used to need other people's albums and I got very involved with their music and it meant a lot to me.
I always loved Alan Menken songs and wanted my first album to be a tribute to him and his work. I always loved his music.
We're putting a lot of pressure on ourselves for this second album and so we want to make it as great as we possibly can.
I love Rihanna's new album, Skrillex, and Norah Jones. They're are all very different, but I love any rock, pop, and jazz.
As teenagers, we used to listen to entire Rush albums, entire Pink Floyd albums and shut down the lights and it was great.
I'm into paradoxes. I wanted to make an album about them, but the group told me I was a pretentious fart. They were right.
I did 'Love Letter' and 'Write Me Back,' and those were fun albums for me to do because they took me back to music I love.
Heltah Skeltah-meets-Portishead would be like the Brand New Heavies Hip Hop album, something like that. That's dope, word.
I've had mixtapes that have been better than albums I've heard from other artists. I take my time; I put my heart into it.
The Who is one of my favorite bands of all time. 'The Who Sell Out' is one of the greatest art-project albums of all time.
Check out the albums, ... Check out the live performances. That's the reality of it all. Music is such an energizing thing.
You continue to evolve with each album that goes by and, as an artist, you continue to expand with every recording project.
I don't tend to have a favorite album; I tend to have favorite tracks. There are flaws in every album that spoil it for me.
I'll always have songs with a farm connotation on my albums. It's in the fabric of my music, and I plan to keep it that way.
I'm not trying to sound pretentious, but we did sell 12 million records on the first album, so we did get paid a little bit.
And of course, the musician - if he's serious - always answers: My last album is my best, otherwise I wouldn't have done it.
I'm not a slave to the recording industry. I have the freedom to make an album that I want to make and do it the way I want.
One of the first albums that I remember, rap albums I remember really listening to, was LL Cool J 'Mama Said Knock You Out.'
If everything gets too serious for me on the album, I get kinda bored. I've got to have some kind of jovial things in there.
I'm really into a lot of different music, and a lot of stuff that sounds absolutely nothing like anything on the Mini-Album.
I grew up listening to albums by Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix, and they all worked on that multi-layered level.
By the time I did that third solo album, I'd finally learned how to do it, but I'd also learned that I liked being in a band
I grew up listening to everything. I have such a love for music, but I don't want to make the same album over and over again.
What I'm hoping is that every album I'm going to do will give my audience something different, and that they'll grow as I do.
All of our albums are actually pretty similar, it's just the production that's different. Our songwriting is always the same.
I'm a big fan of other guitar players, Duane Allman and tons of them, but I don't really love totally guitar-specific albums.
Every time someone come out with an album don't change the whole style up but don't do what they are expecting. Surprise them.
Everybody is looking for a hit single but what the artists really need is an executive producer to help put better albums out.
Taking a scenic route in Southeast Iowa is like talking about a good Barry Manilow album. You have to make certain allowances.
Any good album title has multiple meanings, and I like choosing titles where I find myself repeating it, almost like a mantra.
I think a lot of that album ["Tonight" ] is still very good . . . the songs, but I think I was indifferent to the arrangements.
I think all my albums have concentrated on songs, I've never taken the typical Van Halen route to try and become a guitar hero.
When I was working with David Cassidy at the Rio, I made an album of updated versions of some 1970s disco tunes. I had a blast.
One of the reasons why my album is called 'Forget the World' is because when you listen to the world, you make stupid mistakes.
I've never listened to an album once I've finished it. All I hear is what I should've done different. I beat myself up over it.
I could find faults with all my albums because that's just a part of being an artist - it's hard being a human being, isn't it?
The Nirvana unplugged album was something we'd always knew we were capable of doing, but it was just a matter of doing it right.
I'd like to do a pop album with an R and B influence. I definitely want to have those big ballads with the uptempo hits as well.
I want to make albums that are like a Murakami novel or a Terrence Malick film - something that explicitly states its own world.
I guess I do feel the need to repent. I do feel like I owe the world a great album. I don't know why I feel that way. I just do.
Smokin' at the Half Note is the absolute greatest jazz-guitar album ever made. It is also the record that taught me how to play.
Lately, Ive been listening to some jazz albums. I love the new Pat Metheny album. John Coltrane. I still like good metal, though!