Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Borns

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Borns.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Borns

Garrett Clark Borns, better known by his stage name Børns, is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist.

Yeah, moving to Los Angeles definitely influenced my sound.
I like the idea of creating from your inner youth. You don't have to think too hard about it. Just make what feels good.
We're always trying to make advancements in the arts and technology, so it's somewhat inevitable that we're going to make holograms of people. — © Borns
We're always trying to make advancements in the arts and technology, so it's somewhat inevitable that we're going to make holograms of people.
A big piece of my heart is definitely in Michigan and will always be in Michigan. Growing up there is definitely a big part of who I am as a person.
If you've never been to Michigan, everyone thinks it's completely rural. It's a destination state. You don't really drive through; you're going there for a reason.
I was pretty young when my folks were playing those kinds of records, '70s rock and psychedelic stuff. So I just remember those songs being synonymous with my childhood, and I was always trying to imitate them on piano.
I grew up with my mother as a Tonic Shaman.
When I wrote 'Dopamine,' I was so enamored by Los Angeles and finally making music I was really excited about.
Nothing grounds you like a real authentic Mexican taco.
That's one thing I really wanted to work on after 'Dopamine,' my falsetto.
My folks bought a baby grand piano and that's where I did the majority of figuring out the songs I heard on the stereo.
My parents played the Bee Gees; Earth, Wind & Fire; Michael Jackson. The best pop music to infiltrate a child's mind.
No, I don't think songwriting is emotionally challenging - I feel like it's almost a way to sort through your emotions and put them out there. — © Borns
No, I don't think songwriting is emotionally challenging - I feel like it's almost a way to sort through your emotions and put them out there.
No one pursued music professionally in my family but they are all music lovers.
I have these lacy shirts that look kind of like my grandma's curtains that I wear.
A lot of my songs are inspired by a muse of some sort, whether she's real or not.
I feel like music is always alive and well.
I have the luxury of having the choice to perform and go up on stage every night.
That's the worst and best thing about being in the studio, feeling completely lost and not knowing how to put the final touch on something. But once you find it, there's nothing like that feeling.
I'm not growing out my hair just to be androgynous.
My vocal influences are a lot of jazz singers: Billie Holiday, Julie London, they had this tenderness to their voice.
I kind of lose my mind a little bit if I'm not making something.
I dance as best I can. I try to let the music flow freely through my legs.
You should always read the ingredients in coconut water. It should say 100% coconut water.
A magic show and a concert are very similar in the way I like keeping things a mystery and not doing them the same way every time. The listener and the audience never know what's going to happen next.
I feel very short-attention span for like accomplishment. It's like 'oh that felt really good' and then it's kind of like an immediate emptiness of I need to make something else - I don't like to dwell on things too long.
I really like Colin Blunstone, the lead singer of the Zombies.
I don't want to make a living. I want to make a life.
I'm a professional musician.
I grew up a huge Roy Orbison fan. He had such a crazy range. And I grew up listening to old jazz, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone. I remember trying to imitate female jazz singers because I had a higher range.
I like writing love songs. I really like romantic poetry.
The ultimate language of love is music... The ultimate connector.
To make a genuine record, it takes more than a cool beat and some auto tune.
I like to buy books at airports sometimes.
I feel like I'm never playing the same sized venues within two or three shows. It keeps me and the band fit in a way. It keeps us on our toes just because you don't get used to one size and one energy. It's good to switch it up.
I have a short attention span.
I bought a Three Dog Night album when I was pretty young, and I remember listening to all those songs. That's just greatly crafted songwriting, and the songs have such great harmonies. I remember marveling over those and trying to figure them out on piano. That was my early education - figuring out records, older records, as a kid.
I feel like piano is my main instrument. I'm most comfortable on the piano. — © Borns
I feel like piano is my main instrument. I'm most comfortable on the piano.
In 2016, I was pretty green. I was budding. Some flowers were shooting off.
I had a band when I was in middle school, but I was the drummer. I kind of thought if I was going to be in a band, I'd be the drummer. I'm innately drawn to rhythm. But we didn't have any shows. We just jammed in our parents' basement.
My parents bought this baby grand piano, which was in my living room, that I owe a lot to. I would just play it and write on it for hours. It was my favorite toy.
When you listen to music, you can tell if it's a real love song or not.
My folks would have parties and all I wanted was to be the entertainment.
It's very easy in the studio to get overzealous with your vocal takes, thinking, 'Oh yeah, I can do it over and over. I can sing at the top of my range for this whole song.' But when you're doing it every night on the road, it's pretty intense.
There's this poet named Walter Benton, I really like his stuff. He always uses landscapes as a metaphor for the female body.
I always go thrift shopping wherever I am.
There's a book called 'The Baron in the Trees.' A friend got that for me because I was kind of a tree-dwelling nomad for a bit. I kind of associate myself with the book.
Circuses don't treat their 'performers' very well - whipping them, trying to make them terrified. — © Borns
Circuses don't treat their 'performers' very well - whipping them, trying to make them terrified.
I try to challenge myself.
I want people to know me in my home state. I want their approval.
I'm influenced by a lot of different genres of music. So I'm constantly trying to rework production and make things interesting in the live show and on records.
Allowing yourself to suck is the hard part of writing music. If you allow yourself to suck, you will probably write something better.
I grew up watching 'The Tonight Show' and Jimmy Fallon on 'SNL.'
Dreams are pretty unexplainable. Have you ever tried to explain a dream to someone, and they're like 'Yeah, that sounds not as exciting as you think it is?'
As far as playing instruments, it just feels good to have it under your hands. Cause sometimes those instruments have minor imperfections. Sometimes because they're so old, they're always out of tune a little bit.
I look at performance clothes as setting the mood for the whole show.
Most of the time, it's pretending I'm somebody else to get into a different head space. A lot of times, it's just, 'Who do I want to be onstage tonight? Is it going to be Marc Bolan, or is it going to be Grace Jones, or Roy Orbison?'
I love learning how people hear my music because everyone has different references.
My favorite songs of all time are songs that take you on a journey and give you pleasurable moments you weren't expecting.
I grew up in Michigan. I feel like a lot of my childhood was in solitude, in the woods or making tree forts.
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