I like the energy of live performance.

I hate every moment of live performance.

Nothing beats a live performance. Nothing.

When it's a live performance, anything can happen.

My first live performance was the lead in 'Peter Pan.'

One of the things I love about music is live performance.

I'm much more energetic now; you might say live performance is my mission.

I enjoy theatre tremendously, and there's nothing like a live performance.

It's easy listening to a record, but a live performance is so personal and real.

I actually acted onstage before I'd ever seen a live performance, and I loved it.

I love musical theatre because I love doing a live performance eight times a week.

My live performance, it just comes from feeling an energy and emotion from the crowd.

Every time I see a live performance of something, I'm like, 'I want to be doing that!'

When I started doing drag, I always put together multimedia elements for live performance.

I also think something that makes the whole live performance fun for me is that I love my music.

We gave up on the idea of trying to make the record a good representation of the live performance.

I believe that intermittent live performance has cut short the writing lives of touring musicians.

I come from theater and captured theater has a bad rap of being never what the live performance was.

My hair's a pain in live performance. I'm always inhaling it: I almost choked to death a couple of times.

When you have a live performance, you're going to be pitchy here and there, unless you have perfect pitch.

The adrenaline of a live performance is unlike anything in film or theater. I can see why it's so addictive.

I'm very excited about the resurgence of vinyl which seems to parallel a growing interest in live performance.

The live performance aspect of shooting a multicamera sitcom is wonderful. You have that instant audience reaction.

I like a performance, a live performance, so I like little mistakes because that's what makes perfect - the mistakes.

The best voice actors all have a live performance background. And are competent, fearless, incredibly creative actors.

A live performance is the same no matter what genre it is. Wrestling, rock 'n roll, hosting, acting - it's the same thing.

Live performance is everything. First of all, I have terrible stage fright. But beyond that, once the music starts, it's OK.

As a musician, I have always strived for my albums and live performance to render a sound as close as possible to perfection.

I do an improv show on Sunday where we have a class, and then afterwards we go and do a live performance in front of an audience.

Get out of your house and go see some live performance, for God's sake. There are people creating things just outside your window.

I was once an extra in a Bruce Springsteen video where they did a live performance video at Tramps. I forget the name of the song.

When you're shooting concert scenes in films, we try to bring in, where appropriate, as much of a sense of live performance as possible.

Live performance really terrifies me. I haven't done it, really, in years. I think that's why I retired from my brief career in stand-up.

In most cases, my favorite Jethro Tull songs will be determined by how I feel about them as live performance songs, not by the recorded identity.

In a live performance, it's a collaboration with the audience; you ride the ebb and flow of the crowd's energy. On television, you don't have that.

I love watching live shows from different artists from different stages of their lives. I'm always interested in the mastery of the live performance.

Artificial intelligence is taking over a lot of things. Jobs are going to go but artists and theatre are not going anywhere because it is live performance.

A studio is like a meditation room where music is created. And a live performance is the place where the creation of the studio is taken ahead. I love both.

From the business point of view - not to overstate it - intellectual property is dead; long live intellectual process. Long live service; long live performance.

I was always more interested in the ultimate live performance rather than the recording for its own sake. And, for the audience too, that thrill of - just being there.

My first live performance was when I was in the military. I went to some bar, and they had open mics. You could just sign up and perform. Nobody cared. Nobody liked it.

There's something distinct and interesting about a live performance. There's this weird immediacy that's, for me, really invigorating, and it just feels really rewarding.

I think movies are a director's medium in the end. Theater is the actor's medium. Theater is fast, and enjoyable, and truly rewarding. I believe in great live performance.

Every acting gig isn't the same, every writing job isn't the same, every live performance isn't the same - the challenge is the level of difficulty or ease, and that may vary.

I'm always happy and most at home on the stage. I love film and television, but I love live performance... your immediacy with the audience, it makes all the difference in the world.

The stage is my first love. It gives me immense self-satisfaction, a sort of power because a stage actor carries the audience along; it's a live performance; spontaneity is its soul.

I love every aspect of live performance and putting our shows together and approaching it from the standpoint of, 'What would we want to see if we were a fan sitting in the audience?'

I thought the world of live performance and busking was where I was going to thrive. I had no idea that digital streaming platforms and radio and that world would be for me, you know?

As much as I love live performance and as much fun as it can be to travel around, it really is nice to be able to stay at home and make a living and pay the mortgage and spend time with my wife.

The real test of a musician is live performance. It's one thing to spend a long time learning how to play well in the studio, but to do it in front of people is what keeps me coming back to touring.

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