Top 62 Quotes & Sayings by Ashley McBryde

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Ashley McBryde.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Ashley McBryde

Ashley McBryde is an American country music singer–songwriter. Raised in Arkansas, she was drawn to various types of music from a young age. She also developed a passion for writing songs and later moved to Nashville, Tennessee to pursue a music career.

If you've ever been in a bar with a bunch of old sailors and see a guy that has an eagle tattooed across his chest, that guy has seen some stuff.
As I got a little older, I discovered Lori McKenna and Patty Griffin and found out how many other tools we have as songwriters, that there's storytelling and there's ear candy, and that there is a place where they meet, too, and both of those women are really good at doing that.
In college, I was able to be the vocalist for the jazz band at Arkansas State. — © Ashley McBryde
In college, I was able to be the vocalist for the jazz band at Arkansas State.
I have a soul the devil wouldn't buy.
Country music is - can be - a loving industry.
I was lucky to grow up in the '90s, when we had just as many strong female artists as male artists. That's a world I would like to live in again.
If you can sing to a room of 60 people who don't give a damn, then if, someday, you're playing to people who really want to hear your music, that's not hard.
Not everybody is going to like your songs. But you probably wouldn't hang out with those people anyway.
Nothing lights a fire under you like somebody saying, 'You're not going to be able to do it.'
I started playing mandolin when I was three or four years old because I was too small to be playing guitar. As I got older and more responsible with holding instruments, I was allowed to play my mom's guitar that she had.
I was a terrible student, but I never missed a music class. In fact, I don't even think I attended most of my gen-ed classes, but I never missed a single music class.
You should read a crowd like you read a magazine.
I'm little. I'm pale. I'm not strong. But bad things are scared of me. I think it's because my dad was a preacher growing up, and I was raised in the Church of Christ.
I was kind of always the underdog. — © Ashley McBryde
I was kind of always the underdog.
There's always going to be people that say you're a sellout - anyone who knew you back when or who wants to begrudge you for having success. That's OK. Their opinion of me, and the box they want to put me in, is just simply none of my business.
You have the most fun, and love is best, when it's just wrong enough to feel good.
I was lucky that my parents listened to really good music. My dad loved Kris Kristofferson.
You never know when the love of your life might just walk in.
That's what you do with the worst day ever: you flip it on its back.
Love songs are all about how I'll move a mountain for you and I'll never hurt your feelings. I've never been given a mountain, and if you love me, you should hurt my feelings sometimes. If I walk outside looking ugly in that shirt, you don't love me if you don't hurt my feelings a little bit and tell me.
I'm kind of a squirrely individual.
There's a few people that I write with that we don't stop until one of us cries.
Singing 'Family Tradition' with Hank Jr. was a pee-your-pants moment. Hank comes over while I'm singing and puts his arm around me, and my knees nearly buckled. You can put off the fact that this is reality, but when he came over, there was just no denying. I just lost cabin pressure.
I'm 5 foot, 3 inches. Even if I hit you, I'm probably not going to knock you down.
I've heard that the true love of country music is alive and well. That gives me so much hope and so much happiness.
You don't change country music; it changes you.
It turns out, the bikers and the truckers and people in dive bars are the nicest people in the world.
Everything I ever needed came out of a radio and a dashboard. My Mount Rushmore of what was cool came out of a radio - Trisha Yearwood, Patty Loveless, Mark Chesnutt.
When I was 12, I wrote a legit song - about having my heart broken, of course, because I was 12 years old going on 40. I sang the song for my mom, and she asked, 'Where did you get that song?' I told her I wrote it, and she said, 'Really?' She looked at my grandparents and just said, 'Oh, boy.'
Your fame and your success moves much more rapidly than your ability to fund it.
There's not a lot to do in a small town, but i grew up on a cattle farm... some people would say there's nothing to do on a cattle farm, but I'd say there's everything to do.
In my musically formative years, I grew up listening to Suzy Bogguss, Trisha Yearwood, Terri Clark.
It's all been guerrilla warfare trying to get my name out there.
I grew up listening to an album start to finish, and you don't skip songs. You don't listen to a Paul Simon record and skip a song: you listen to it the same way you would eat a meal... the way the person who prepared that meal for you means for you to experience it. That's how you should do it before you add salt and pepper to it.
It's humbling when people sing back to you!
The thing about bikers and truckers is they're just regular folks, and that's definitely my demographic.
It's not a problem if 20,000 people heard my music for free, but it's a huge problem if 20,000 people never heard my music.
I keep a $2 bill rolled up in every pair of boots I own because one time, an older guy came up to me at a farmer's market I was playing in Memphis, handed me a $2 bill, and said, 'Stick this in your boot.' And when I stood back up, he handed me a $100 bill and said, 'Thanks for listening to me. Stick this in your pocket.'
I listened to a lot of No Doubt stuff when I was in high school - or maybe it was middle school... I don't want to age myself too much! — © Ashley McBryde
I listened to a lot of No Doubt stuff when I was in high school - or maybe it was middle school... I don't want to age myself too much!
Eric Church knocks down doors everywhere he goes.
I was four days old when I went to my first bluegrass festival.
Being called a new artist doesn't bother me at all.
I have a big love for jazz music. The only thing I hated about singing with a jazz band was having to wear a gown to everything.
In bluegrass, there's a lot of joke-telling and a lot of banter between bandmates. It's like improv or watching the 'Carol Burnett Show.'
I grew up playing bluegrass as a youngster, and I'm happy that I did.
I've been in T- shirts and jeans since I was a kid. I don't have to show you a bunch of my skin for you to listen to my songs.
I get recognized more for my tattoos than my face.
I haven't shut up, I think, since I was born. I tend to talk a lot, and I sing constantly, and I know that it can be kind of annoying, but I would say I sound a lot like my mom.
I am the youngest of six. There's the smart one and the pretty one, and I am the loud one. — © Ashley McBryde
I am the youngest of six. There's the smart one and the pretty one, and I am the loud one.
You know me: jeans, T-shirts, boots, all the time.
Sometimes choosing to leave a mistake on a track is way cooler than going back and nailing it.
When I was growing up, radio DJs were celebrities, not just the people singing the songs.
When you see a chick that's not the skinniest girl in the room, covered in tattoos, you go, 'That girl wants to stick it to the man.' But we don't give a damn about the man. At all. We just want to make music.
Every 'no' I ever received was an inch closer to a 'yes.'
I'm just going to do what I do, and people will like it, or they won't.
My hair turned gray when I was 24.
I do know where I'm from, and I'm proud to be an Arkansan and to represent country music.
I love to think on my feet, and I love to be able to feel from a close proximity how things are going.
The day Guy Clark passed away was the day we wrote 'Girl Goin' Nowhere.' It was the first day I had met Jeremy Bussey, who I wrote the song with.
A secret gets bigger and nastier the longer you don't talk about it.
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