Top 61 Quotes & Sayings by Esperanza Spalding

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

Esperanza Emily Spalding is an American bassist, singer, songwriter, and composer. Her accolades include five Grammy Awards, a Boston Music Award, and a Soul Train Music Award.

I write at the piano, so I write things that fit comfortably under my hands, and I'm not thinking in terms of any specific compositional methods. I'm just seeking sounds.
There is an assumption that if you're young and pretty, you will get all these opportunities that are way beyond your musical foundation.
I just want to say, if you're going crazy, take a break. I felt overwhelmed by stuff that wasn't satisfying me, things I was supposed to do for my career. I stopped and said, 'Let me get back to the basics.'
I never think my music isn't easy until I got to teach it to other people. — © Esperanza Spalding
I never think my music isn't easy until I got to teach it to other people.
You can grow up with literally nothing and you don't suffer if you know you're loved and valued.
I don't watch TV, I don't spend time on the Internet, and I don't party much. I don't text very much, either.
When I was a kid, I was really curious about acting. And I was interested in movement and dance. I wasn't good at either of those things - I didn't work at those things.
I love people, and I love to be with people and to make music with people, but my natural state is to revert back to being by myself in my house, which is cool because that's where I practice and write and listen and study.
And I feel that it's inevitable that the work that I do will reflect the life that I live. And the life I live feels very diverse.
My earliest attempts at writing were when I was seven. I would sit at the piano and transcribe the songs I heard on the radio. I'd change little things in the music and write different lyrics.
Your sanity is harder to get back than money or contacts. You are the magic. You are the art. You can't lose that.
I was exposed to many kinds of music including rock and disco, classical and folk, Midtown and Miles Davis, Sly Stone and David Bowie.
You don't have to be fearless to do anything; you can be scared out of your mind. I fear that I won't get better and that I won't have time to practice. To be called a 'jazz musician' - it's a big responsibility.
I'm realizing now that I was always really curious about inviting people into a space and sharing information that way. But I didn't have any context for it. It was just fun because I was homeschooled and lonely and bored, and I'd do things to get people to come over.
I don't think it's about playing and singing, to be honest. That seems like old news, you know? I wasn't thinking about that. I just think that's in my body now. Dancers don't think about their legs moving one way and their arms moving another. Over time, you incorporate that into your instrument.
It's about process, the process of growth. It seems to me in my own life - and other minds throughout history have also observed this phenomenon - that growth seems to move in two directions at the same time.
I focused primarily on being an instrumentalist and studying music and on my primary means of expression: composing and playing. — © Esperanza Spalding
I focused primarily on being an instrumentalist and studying music and on my primary means of expression: composing and playing.
If you're a writer, and you write fiction, that's not all you read.
Jazz has always been a melting pot of influences and I plan to incorporate them all.
On nights that I'm feeling a need to stretch personally and artistically, I tend to put together outfits that are very quirky, mismatched and over-the-top eclectic.
There's nothing wrong with struggle. Anytime I look back at a difficult phase of my life and see what grew out of it - the creative survival tactics - I think that the good is way better than the bad.
I grew up with an incredibly loving and supportive family that gave me the impression there were a lot of options for me out there.
Anything I do has to have integrity, so if you just want to make music, it's not difficult finding support. The hard part for a publicist or manager is making a star.
There's enough time in the day: If you go to bed at 10 and start your day at 6, there's a lot you can do in a day!
When I was a kid, people called me Emily rather than Esperanza, even though my full name is Esperanza Emily Spalding.
When something in art or music piques my interest, I tend to go check it out, and most things I check out, I'm not very good at. But a few things I've gone to check out have given me back as much love as I gave them, usually much more.
There's a guy I used to pay to work with me who'd call me 'kiddo.' I said, 'There's nothing that justifies you expressing that to me, your boss.'
For what I can imagine and feel and think and hear, I can hardly do anything on the acoustic bass. It used to be just pure frustration of imagining so much more and being able to get to a certain level of execution.
I like to read, and I like dance. I don't dance, but I like to see other people dance.
I love Aretha Franklin, Edith Piaf, Blondie.
Genre boundaries are good for marketing but they all but disappear when you're a player.
It's a pity that if someone who has a really profoundly potent art to share chooses not to or doesn't fit into this very thin slice of what's desirable and marketable, chances are the public will never get a chance to hear what they're doing.
I always say that the problem with jazz accessibility is not the content of the music, it's people's ability to access it.
I am insubordinate by nature. I can't help it.
I put my mother through a lot when I was a teenager. I used to lie a lot. Now, we talk all the time.
I just think music is so intrinsically linked with images in the culture that we live in that you'll be hard-pressed to have an experience with the music without a preconceived notion.
The benefit of the radio is, something beyond your realm of knowledge can surprise you, can enter your realm of knowledge.
As you go back or move toward insights/ideas/events/words/lessons/mistakes in the past, you develop into the future from the present. I think that's pretty cool that two quote-unquote opposites are intrinsically linked. That whole theme of opposites being two sides of the same whole is a theme that's always been intriguing to me.
If you don't already know about jazz music, how would you be exposed? How would get an opportunity to find out if it spoke to you? If you get exposed to it enough, you might find a taste for it.
I think there's so much negative influence on children in school settings. It becomes learning by rote to pass a test. It's not contextualized. — © Esperanza Spalding
I think there's so much negative influence on children in school settings. It becomes learning by rote to pass a test. It's not contextualized.
Whoever you are, if you know what you're doing, you don't want other people to overtake the merit of your art.
When I read, you know, a rough neighborhood of Portland, I'm like - what? - they didn't have kombucha bars there?
It's weird sometimes to have people not see me or see what I do.
I fear that I won't get better and that I won't have time to practice. To be called a "jazz musician" - it's a big responsibility.
Up-and-coming musicians can easily reach out and find a loving teacher, and that's definitely what happened to me.
I just think music is so intrinsically linked with images in the culture that we live in that youll be hard-pressed to have an experience with the music without a preconceived notion.
My name means 'hope' in Spanish and it's a name I want to live up to.
When people say, "Oh, she plays like a dude," it's usually dudes who are the ones saying it. They're saying, "Oh, she's as good as us." Of course, that's a stupid statement.
People are more used to seeing men who are masters at an instrument than women. When people say, 'Oh, she plays like a dude,' it's usually dudes who are the ones saying it. They're saying, 'Oh, she's as good as us.' Of course, that's a stupid statement. It's totally stereotypical to say, 'We have an advantage on this, and if anyone else can do it well, it's only because they're like us.' I think more men are starting to learn that this attitude is totally hollow and based in imagination. As more women are involved in music, this kind of thing gets said less and less.
You don't have to be fearless to do anything, you can be scared out of your mind.
There's the juiciest music that makes me so happy, music that I need on that deserted island when I'm stranded for the rest of my life, and nobody cares that it's there.
Jazz music just resonates with the frequency of me. — © Esperanza Spalding
Jazz music just resonates with the frequency of me.
I love people, and I love to be with people and to make music with people, but my natural state is to revert back to being by myself in my house, which is cool because thats where I practice and write and listen and study.
What I'm identifying with is the vision or the idea - whatever was the little nugget that started it.
I’m not gonna sit around and waste my precious divine energy trying to explain and be ashamed of things you think are wrong with me.
You can grow up with literally nothing and you don’t suffer if you know you’re loved and valued.
The music that I make is pretty sincere; it's from my heart and I love it, and what just happened is more people have started to connect with my heart, and I haven't followed some kind of marketing scheme.
It's a pity if someone who has a really profoundly potent art to share chooses not to or doesn't fit into this very thin slice of what's desirable and marketable, chances are the public will never get a chance to hear what they're doing.
People are more used to seeing men who are masters at an instrument than women.
The Czech ease has become my saving grace for traveling! Plus,with its light weight and small size, I save thousands of dollars every year in airline fees.
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