Top 41 Quotes & Sayings by David Johansen

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician David Johansen.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
David Johansen

David Roger Johansen is an American singer, songwriter and actor. He is best known as a member of the seminal proto-punk band the New York Dolls. He is also known for his work under the pseudonym Buster Poindexter, and for playing the Ghost of Christmas Past in Scrooged.

I'm compelled to paint nearly every day. I just felt like making a painting, went out and bought paints and a canvas. Now it fulfills me creatively when I'm not doing music: it's something you can do by yourself and it's totally yours. It's a great adjunct to my life.
I'm afraid of me.
We thought that's the way you were supposed to be if you were in a rock 'n' roll band. Flamboyant. — © David Johansen
We thought that's the way you were supposed to be if you were in a rock 'n' roll band. Flamboyant.
I've been tired since I was 15.
Sometimes when I hear my voice on tape, I'm like, 'Who is that horrible man?'
Everything I've done I've just fallen into.
When you're a kid, you have this feeling like you're indestructible. Your mortality doesn't even occur to you. But as time goes by, you realize, 'I better cut this out or that out if I want to continue to exist.'
Sometimes I've found that by getting into a certain drag, or a certain feeling, you can cast off your mortal coil and really do something. I don't know if it's important, but it's something. It's entertainment.
The stuff that I dig, it's usually got a soulful component to it. A singer that I really like. I might not understand the language that they're singing in, but I'm really communing with this person.
I'm doing exactly what I want to do, and I'm having fun doing it.
In the late '70s, I had a band - the David Johansen band, for lack of a better name - and I started collecting, not records, but tapes from people I knew who had jump-blues records.
Music is my love and to me acting is more mercenary. I don't pound the pavements for roles: if it happens, it happens. I hate that auditioning thing.
The first Latin music that blew my mind was bumba, which was a Puerto Rican beat. — © David Johansen
The first Latin music that blew my mind was bumba, which was a Puerto Rican beat.
Most bands are commercial enterprises. But I'm not in one of those bands.
I think we as a band, as individuals, understand that all popular music stems from blues and jazz and even pop, but rock 'n' roll especially comes from blues.
When I was a kid, I had some Charles Lloyd records.
I've been around the block a couple of times, and the guy I am now is the guy I like to be.
I don't really like to sit around the house listening to my own records. They're not that good.
You try things on in life. You wear them for a while, and you see what's next.
It's really a drag to do the same project over and over again.
You know, when you're making a record, you come up with 15, 20 songs. Then they start to fall by the wayside as your interest wanes. It's kind of like a process of elimination to determine which songs wind up on the record.
Until I was six years old we lived in the projects, then my two brothers and three sisters and I moved to a three-bed that my mother's father built.
Playing music is the best thing in the world. It makes show business almost bearable.
I mean, if you asked me what I'm going to be doing when I'm 85, I'd make a quick picture in my mind and, well, I'll be singing.
I still do a lot of shows with Brian Koonin, but we haven't had a full band lately.
You know when you read that someone has to leave a show or a tour because they had 'nervous exhaustion'? Well, I had one of those and discovered that I was quite close to death. I always assumed that my lifestyle was going to take me at an early age, but when it was actually occurring I was, 'Not yet!' I pulled back.
I got arrested once on stage in Memphis for looking too much like Liza Minnelli.
I'm not impersonating anybody. I'm perfectly satisfied with what I am.
As I recall, my life as a child was so all-consuming that I barely had time to consider the future. — © David Johansen
As I recall, my life as a child was so all-consuming that I barely had time to consider the future.
My father was a Norwegian tenor and my mother a New York Irish librarian.
I don't know why I'm alive but I know there's a reason for it.
When I'm sleeping I do a lot of living.
The world today is the same as it always was but people know more about what's going on in the world than they used to.
I mean, if you asked me what I’m going to be doing when I’m 85, I’d make a quick picture in my mind and, well, I’ll be singing.
Sometimes when I hear my voice on tape, I'm like, 'Who is that horrible man?
When you're a kid, you have this feeling like you're indestructible. Your mortality doesn't even occur to you. But as time goes by, you realize, "I better cut this out or that out if I want to continue to exist."
Young people are still looking and older people have found.
A lot of stuff I do, 10 years later it becomes popular.
I think we as a band, as individuals, understand that all popular music stems from blues and jazz and even pop, but rock 'n' roll especially comes from blues. What we're trying to do is play rock 'n' roll, but other people call it different things.
Rock & Rollers don't dress for the weather. — © David Johansen
Rock & Rollers don't dress for the weather.
I don't know if it's possible to affect my ego any more. There's no room left. For me, I think I make music like the way I think it should be made, like what rock should sound like. It has nothing to do with the current marketplace. And so from that state of mind, it's gonna sound different from anything else out there. And when something sounds different, I think that can be inspiring to other musicians.
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