We just hope to reach out to our fans and give them more hope through our music and content.

I just lived openly, as loud as I wanted to be, which translated into our music really well.

We don't really have more than acouple of solos. It's just the way our music is put together.

The stories in our music form a special viewpoint on the story of America in the 20th Century.

We've never been shy to admit that Metallica is a huge influence in our lives and on our music.

We're thrilled to play an offbeat place. Our music fits with it. I love playing unusual venues.

I think... people are inspired by our music, and that's cool. We all borrow each other's music.

We never said we were hard-core or that we didn't want our music crossing over or being popular.

Our music will continue to have an impact in people's lives long after we finally call it quits.

I would love for people to enjoy our music and have feelings from it. That's all I can hope for.

It was really terrific but Foreigner was nothing like Yes and that style did not suit our music.

The goal is never be a copycat of ourselves. It's more along the lines of taking risks in our music.

This is fun; consuming our music shouldn't be a responsibility like eating your spinach or something.

I think hopefully we've got enough brain cells left to decide if our music is really worth something.

We'd like to think that our music will always be bigger than any one of our individual personalities.

Our music doesn't make many compromises, but we take it into a venue that's larger than people expect.

Our music is a get-up music. Get you up music, uplift your spirit. That's what I'm trying to give you.

I wanted people to say that our music sounds like Porcupine Tree, not that it sounds like King Crimson.

The Grateful Dead were an influence on our music but they weren't by a long shot the biggest influence.

Our music is never going to stop someone from bullying someone else. But you should be your own person.

We keep our music simple, no big gimmicks. We tell stories people can relate to, not hard to understand.

I feel like no matter what we do though, we'll always have hip-hop and a little bit of R&B in our music.

A lot of young people have been raised on our music, or rather had it forced upon them by their parents.

We've been fully involved in making our music, and to be personally involved is what we really asked for.

We've worked very hard as a band and would like to think we've got this far on the strength of our music.

We hope that our music does not stop at giving joy to the listeners but also change their lives positively.

Our music attracts the people that we rap about and make music about, and they come out and actually do it.

Our music over the years has been very cinematic. It's surprising we never really got into film soundtracks.

What's most important to us is that our fans listen to and enjoy our music. That alone makes us happy enough.

You can equate our music to childbirth. It's brutal and harsh, but there's still a beautiful thing occurring.

If somebody told me people would still care about our music 25 years ago, I would have thought they were crazy.

I'm just thankful that we were able to reach out to so many different fans that didn't know what our music was.

Treating your audience like thieves is absurd. Anyone who chooses to listen to our music becomes a collaborator.

We really believe in our music, and it's still heartening to know that it's appreciated, and that's what sticks.

Our music is being played on MTV and the radio. That's something that still blows us away. And we did it our way.

Records and numbers are important, but there's nothing better than a lot of people being happy through our music.

Our music is all about making music for the party. We don't call it music, we call it tools - tools for the party.

I've heard people say all our music sounds the same, but it's usually just the people who don't like us who say it.

Odisha people are very musical. Our music industry has got many talented artists from Odisha. They love music a lot.

From our music in general, we've always fought the idea that we had to fit into a box or fit into a certain category.

Everyone was surprised then that our music got such a foothold because they said 'You're so fresh-faced and wholesome.'

All our fans have great energy, and that's where we get our energy to perform. They know how to have fun with our music.

We don't want to categorize our music. Some people say you need a definite musical direction to give a group visibility.

Our music is harder to play than it sounds. It's the small details you don't realize are there until you try and re-do it.

There's a lot of people out there - like, a lot of people out there - that wouldn't know our music if it wasn't for Spotify.

Certainly, jazz has become more of a niche, which is surprising, because it's our music. It's the national music of America.

We've incorporated different sounds from different countries and genres, and we've explored widening the range of our music.

That's something Pentatonix tries to do in all of our music. We try to keep it clean so that everybody can come to our shows.

Our music is constantly evolving and changing, and when this band put out an album we always try to offer something different.

We are Korean, so obviously they call our music K-pop. But we never thought of our music as K-pop. Our music is just our music.

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