Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician India Arie.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
India Arie Simpson, also known as India Arie, is an American singer and songwriter. She has sold over 5 million records in the US and 10 million worldwide. She has won four Grammy Awards from her 23 nominations, including Best R&B Album.
I've never said anything that I didn't want to say on a record, ever.
Our food choices show up on our body.
Obviously, I've been heartbroken. We all know what that feels like.
So many people have been abused. It's not rare; it's a very common human experience, and we survive.
In this era, soul is not a sound or a color: it's an intention.
You wash your hands when you shake a bunch of hands. You have to wash your energy when you're around people. It's hard for me to say self-care is washing, although I think it is. So I made music for self-care. That's what it's for.
I am on an album with theater icon Billy Porter called the 'Soul of Richard Rodgers.' Our duet is called 'Carefully Taught.'
Nina Simone sacrificed so much to be as bold as she was about being black and about being female in an era where that could have cost her life.
I think anyone who is ever on TV is a role model for somebody.
I like Brandy a lot. She's a vocal prodigy.
I'm kind of like a folk singer mixed with soul, but I feel like if you really are a lover of hip-hop music, make the beat banging as possible and then put the message in so that people get the honey with the medicine.
The thought crossed my mind about not wanting to alienate my fan base, but I don't know what would alienate them or bring them in, so I decided not to think about it.
You deal with what comes to you. If it's something you don't like, you deal with it the best you can. If it's something that you love, you rise to the occasion.
I feel like I'm always gonna sing and write songs because it's me.
I like being a role model - people have told me that I am a role model for empowered women, but I don't see myself that way.
Sound is energy, and that energy resonates with your energy. And it gives you a certain feeling.
I've been trying to arrive at a person who is self-defined and able to make my own mistakes rather than having other people make them for me.
I didn't even listen to Bob Marley until I was 17.
One of the things that helped me to be confident is to be the kind of musician that I respect. I always liked musicians who wrote their own songs, and so I started writing my own songs.
I always have something by Stevie Wonder in my CD player.
I loved her music and the fact that she was a classically trained pianist and that her voice was so unique, but what made Nina Simone my hero is that I had never seen anyone in the public eye who looked anything like me at all, ever.
I write about my experiences, so a lot of times, I do write about people.
What I love about Stevie Wonder is the way he makes people feel. He's one of the best examples of how music can heal.
I do believe in prophecy.
Just to keep myself balanced, I do things like yoga and meditation.
To spread love, healing, peace, and joy is my mission in life - and so I speak up.
I'm really judgmental, especially about things that I feel make my life harder.
It's not my place to say how Zoe Saldana perceives herself, and I can't say how anybody else perceives her, either. I see her as a black person of Hispanic origin, but I don't even know what that really means, because I don't know anything about race and Hispanic culture.
I'm actually not a fan of the word 'woke.' I think the connotation of that means being socially aware, which is a beautiful thing to be. But it does not take into account being self-aware.
There's a difference in being opinionated and judgmental; I'm still trying to figure out what that fine line is - I think we are all.
It's important to have a place where you can recharge. Everybody's is different, but I do think it should entail quiet because it needs to be where you hear your spirit most clearly. For me, that's the prayer room in my apartment. And since my home is 700 square feet, I mean the coat closet near the front door.
Your soul is between you and God.
If we can just focus our attention where it matters, we can effect change.
If I were not a black artist but I was still singing, playing guitar, and singing ballads that are spiritual and cerebral, I'd be easier to market because people accept that from white female singer-songwriters faster.
I know that I pray a lot, and I take time for myself.
I don't really consider myself a teacher. I think - like, I have opinions like everyone else, and I just share my opinions.
In my opinion, you just have to make the music. Make the music and work as hard as you can to get it out there.
In hindsight, I feel like I made the right decision to choose production that would get played on black radio.
I'm not just making rhymes and making melodies. I'm expressing my true life force, energy.
Joe Sample was one of my heroes. I met him at the Curacao Jazz festival, and I fanned out like he was the Beatles!
Neo-soul is really less about a sound than it is about a look, in my opinion.
When someone is themselves through their music, it's soul music. James Taylor is soul music to me 'cause it's just him talking about him. It doesn't have anything to do with black or growing up in the church; it's where it comes from. It's just soul music.
I wouldn't be back in my 20s for anything.
The subconscious doesn't distinguish sarcasm and jokes. It just accepts what it hears. That's the power of words.
You need to take care of you and fortify yourself and then move out to take care of others.
For me, the healing process starts with graciousness and forgiveness.
For the first ten years of my career, I felt suffocated. People constantly stood over me while I tried to create. And in 2009, I hit rock bottom. I couldn't find myself because I was looking to be defined by the music industry or by being number one on the Billboard charts.
I am really excited to be partnering with Palmer's Cocoa Butter Formula. Aside from being a longtime fan of their products, they're a family business with a strong ethical foundation, and that makes us a great match.
When I perform, I'm just very much just being myself.
I know the things I say go out of my own mouth and into my own ears.
The thing that makes me feel most alive is knowing that there's something that I have to do that I'm afraid of.
What I love about Christmas music is it stays around every year and comes back.
I was born in love with music. My mother is a singer. Many of my aunts and uncles on my mother's side are musical. My grandparents sang and played blues piano. It's literally in my blood.
Everybody has their own path. I got mine.
Between '06 and '09, I dealt with pain by eating. And I was like, 'Oh, crap, eating makes you gain weight!'
Listening to 'Songs in the Key of Life' always puts me in a good mood.
Just like the air you breathe or the water you drink, music shapes you. The trouble is, most people don't use it to spread love and healing. But I think music can make a social contribution if you're responsible with it.
Saying things on paper that I would never, ever say, and saying things to myself, admitting things to myself, about myself and my personality, just putting it on paper, is how I deal with emotional pain.
Even when it doesn't look good, it's always good. Even the worst thing, there's always something good that comes out of it. I've learned that.
When it comes down to the song writing, I'm just very slow - very slow. Because the songs are about my life, so I'm doing emotional work on myself.