Top 111 Quotes & Sayings by Dierks Bentley

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

Frederick Dierks Bentley is an American country music singer and songwriter. In 2003, he signed to Capitol Nashville and released his eponymous debut album. Both it and its follow-up, 2005's Modern Day Drifter, are certified platinum in the United States. A third album, 2006's Long Trip Alone, is certified gold. It was followed in mid-2008 by a greatest hits package. His fourth album, Feel That Fire was released in February 2009. A bluegrass album, Up on the Ridge, was released on June 8, 2010; a sixth album, Home, followed in February 2012, as did a seventh one, Riser, in 2014. Bentley's eighth album, entitled Black, was released in May 2016. His most recent release, a compilation EP titled Make My World Go Black, was released in 2021.

I'm a member of the George Jones fan club, and I'm a member of U2's fan club.
I'm part of the party, getting the crowd fired up, singing songs, pouring drinks, whatever it takes to get them to have a good time. When I walk into the meet-and-greet, someone's always going to have a story, a sad story or a happy story.
You can't write about stuff you don't know about. You have to live it. You have to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty. Live life to be a good songwriter. — © Dierks Bentley
You can't write about stuff you don't know about. You have to live it. You have to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty. Live life to be a good songwriter.
When you go to the Opry for a show or hear it on the radio, you get the whole circle of country music.
No, as an artist, you have to be free to explore all the corners of your heart. There are no boundaries.
When I got to Nashville, people started asking me about how I got into country music. I'd tell them I came from a place where people wore cowboy hats for a real reason.
And I'm the biggest country fan there is, but I'm always a little cautious of a slower song or just a song with subject matter.
Most of my read on America is through looking through the front windshield of a bus and hanging out with country music fans backstage.
I love singing fun songs; I've built a career on them.
I try to make sure to get off the bus as much as I can, try to do something during the day that's local to where I am, whether it's hiking or fishing.
I think I've claimed the right to be any version of me that I want to be.
I can act... well, kind of. I'm comfortable in front of a camera.
I do see the world as being different for girls - especially now, having daughters. — © Dierks Bentley
I do see the world as being different for girls - especially now, having daughters.
Where I'm at in my relationship with my wife or my family and life in general, I feel like it all comes out in the music. Hopefully, it's always there, but in an ambiguous and abstract way and not real straightforward.
My wife is cool enough to let me write about personal things, to be a songwriter exploring the shadowy sides of love.
But as far as being an American and loving this country and getting a chance to travel across it every day and meeting people on the road and folks in the military, I love this country on so many different levels.
It's not that you can do this calculated move to try to further your career. You just follow what's in your heart, and later you look back and go, 'I was either really dumb or really smart, I can't believe I did that.'
A typical day for me on tour is a marathon - it's like five days rolled into one.
I wrote that song 'Black,' and it was just this idea that I had been married for 10 years. Everyone talks about 'happily ever after,' but there's so much more to it than that.
Love always had my number. I could never patch a breakup together with whiskey and a one-night stand. I took them real hard.
I'm a huge fan of Billy Idol. I spiked my hair every day like him in 7th and 8th grade.
I try to make my box as big as it can be because I never want to do the same thing twice.
I hope fans walk away still feeling like their batteries are charged. I want fans walking away high-fiving strangers.
The transformation that happens when a young artist goes on the road - you put the acoustic guitar down and start to play the electric a little louder - it gets a little bit ragged.
Only in country music can you compare an old pickup truck and an old guitar to your wife and turn it into a love song... Thank God for country music.
I think about me and my dad taking a road trip from Phoenix to Nashville when I was 19. He's no longer here with me, but I still drive that same 1994 Chevy truck. I never have bought a new car.
When I was 13, I was just figuring out how to play 'Eruption,' poorly, by Eddie Van Halen.
And if I want to get involved in choosing sides, I usually pick hockey or football.
I mean, the last thing I want to do is be involved in politics.
I never met Johnny Cash personally, but I feel like I did because I listened to so much of his music, and even though he's gone, it's still there: you can go pull a vinyl record out and hear his personal thoughts and his voice and feel connected to him.
As a songwriter, you might write every day and throughout the course of a year you might get four songs that are really special.
I always say the best applause you can get is when you walk from backstage up to your microphone at a concert. It's also nice to walk up to the mike at an awards show, and that applause is great, too, but the best is when your fans are cheering for you.
I really can't tell you the feeling I feel, like, being on stage: it's such a high; it's like running a marathon. You just can't get that feeling anywhere else.
I try to make an album that reflects what I love about country music. It's not just all about happy parties all the time. There are some sad songs.
Patty Griffin is iconic, and there's no other word to really describe her. She is iconic for a lot of people - not only for me but for a lot of fans. Her voice is one of a kind, and she's such an important figure in the American music scene.
I put a lot of time into making sure my relationship with my family is well taken care of because I want to be as successful as a father as I am as an entertainer.
I also was a huge 'Dukes of Hazzard' fan. I used to have T-shirts that said 'Dierks of Hazzard' custom-made.
That's what we get to do as songwriters, right? You get to explore stuff. — © Dierks Bentley
That's what we get to do as songwriters, right? You get to explore stuff.
The people I always loved listening to had a little bit of dirt under their fingernails because they had done some living and had these stories to talk about.
I want to be free to be any version of me I feel like being. I don't want to be McDonald's that serves the same food every time.
I feel like I've got a nice little niche where I stay just below the radar, which is perfect. I just don't want to be known for anything other than music.
I discovered early on that I was more of a strummer than a picker.
If someone wants a picture, I'm so honored and so flattered, and I hope I have a reputation as someone who goes out of his way to do those kinds of things.
Some people associate red with love, but to me, red is for an earlier stage of a relationship. Black is much deeper, to me. It's certainly the sexiest color.
In my 30s, I became more open to music other than country or bluegrass.
My guitar, it was new when I got it, but it has a hole like Willie's where it's just worn out from my pinky going back and forth over the wood over all these years. I got Willie Nelson to sign that spot on my guitar. I'm a huge fan of him.
Country music is always changing but the Opry is always there to serve as a lighthouse for what country music really is. The past, present and future is all encompassed by not only the physical structure of the building but also the radio show.
I got into rock music at thirteen, listening to Van Halen, learned how to play the electric guitar. — © Dierks Bentley
I got into rock music at thirteen, listening to Van Halen, learned how to play the electric guitar.
I put a lot of pressure on myself. I tell my wife when she's listening to my songs that the slightest hint of whether she likes it or not puts the pressure on me.
I think the great country songs mixed with some of that bluegrass instrumentation - and surrounding all that with a little bit of a rock vibe and energy - is the kind of music I make.
I'm surrounded by all these strong women - my publicist, my manager, and my wife - and sometimes I think that women are more evolved than men, and they are able to process a heartache better.
Whether lyrically or musically, it reaches in there and grabs your soul. That's the stuff I gravitate toward.
I like big shows, a lot of volume and a lot of energy. I love electric instruments. But I do love mixing those with bluegrass instruments and cranking those up, too, with a little bit of that rock energy.
My dad and grandpa were in the army and as a country singer you're constantly playing at military bases all across the country and meeting soldiers and their families and hearing their stories.
If you got in my truck, you were listening to country music, and that's the way it was for a long time. I'm a little more open to other sources of music now, a lot more. But for the formative years, I was just very into country.
People are gravitating towards Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders because they are doing their own thing. I think people are trying to cut out the middle man and just get to the source and get away from Washington politics.
I still feel like that 17-year-old-kid that fell in love with country music, but I also am allowed to write songs about being a man, too, which I think is the coolest place I've ever been in my life.
I don't think my music has changed to reflect getting married or having kids. But... if you want to continue to write your own songs, you've got to find deeper stuff to write about. You've got to go to different places.
That's what I love about Nashville and the music community - seeing kids around acoustic music and bluegrass picking parties is the best.
Being married is one thing, but having kids will completely change you. I still go out and hang with my buddies, but having two daughters will completely change your perspective on the world.
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