Top 56 Quotes & Sayings by Joanna Newsom

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Joanna Newsom.
Last updated on April 14, 2025.
Joanna Newsom

Joanna Newsom is an American singer-songwriter and actress. Born and raised in Northern California, Newsom was classically trained on the harp in her youth, and began her musical career as a keyboardist in the San Francisco–based indie band the Pleased.

Well, yeah, I wanted to resist the urge to thicken everything up with instrumentation, because I just felt like I was interested in seeing how the songs did on their own.
I wasn't interested in writing music that wasn't beautiful for me to listen to.
You should listen to a lot of different music. — © Joanna Newsom
You should listen to a lot of different music.
It's valid that the Strokes and the Pleased have been influenced by some of the same bands. But it's invalid in the sense that we listen to the Strokes and try to sounds like them. I think that they are a good band.
The very first Walnut Whales recording was recorded just a few weeks after I had started singing, out of the blue, started singing. And the voice, you can hear how uncomfortable I am with it, and how terrified I am with it.
Lyrics are very different. There is a clear line between that and a poem. Something that has been a source of great excitement and delight for me is this idea that I get to rhyme.
In high school, we studied a lot of poetical forms. I was really interested in the math that was involved and the strange live break ups. That gave me a great amount of respect for a rhymed stanza.
I am not doing something that it is experimental music in relation to classical music.
I am consciously not trying to bring in World Music elements. The ways that I work and feel are completely different in how they sound than someone playing the Kora in Africa would play it.
I would happy for someone to download my music.
The way that words fit together is always interesting to me. I love words.
I started playing harp about fourteen years ago.
I definitely don't subscribe to the theory that more instruments, or more vocal tracks, harmony, or double tracking the voice, is a good thing. People do their early albums very stripped down, then each album becomes bloated.
I have a deep rooted folk sensibility that I can't get away from completely. — © Joanna Newsom
I have a deep rooted folk sensibility that I can't get away from completely.
People in San Francisco and the East Bay have shown interest, done interviews, and have come to shows. I guess that the news travels fast out of this island that we are on.
I have a recording that I did of instrumental songs.
I recorded harp first or singing first. I recorded it all together. Part of the reason is that I don't know how to play the songs without also singing. I forget how they progress. I don't think that any of them are verse, chorus, verse, and so on. They are not simple.
I wanted to write songs which I think is a different thing. I wanted to write music that is informed by folk music. The chord progressions are obvious references.
I can't play my songs on the smaller harp. I have a Celtic harp. I can't do the key changes.
I did spend a year in high school being obsessed with Fleetwood Mac.
I played piano for about two years when I was a kid. I didn't play long enough to be really great.
I am consciously trying not to make it sound Celtic or African.
I have writing songs on my own for about six years.
People are often afraid for me. They think that I am going to break. I can make it through a set.
I give away CDs at shows if someone wants a CD but doesn't have any money. I wouldn't want to do that forever.
I can understand someone not liking the voice or the songs.
I am always trying to write.
I want to make music that somehow connects to the things that I love in America music.
It's totally different. I usually don't tell people about the Pleased if they know me from the harp. And if they are there to see the Pleased, I usually don't tell them about the harp. I am nervous that these people will expect something similar.
I am producing sounds that people are not used to hearing from the harp.
Families of privilege and money would have harps in their parlors, and their cultured daughters would learn to play. It's got such a strange history. But that wasn't the context that I learned it in, so the inherent friction between that history and the more humanist folk-y history wasn't in my conscience at all.
I've been unaware of how people react to the instrument. People have ideas of what a harp is supposed to sound like, and a lot of them are negative ideas.
I can bear a lot but not that pall
Never get so attached to a poem that you forget truth that lacks lyricism.
I don't think I'm abnormal and I think that lets people down.
I'm not a wanderer, which is funny because I'm on tour half the time. I'm a home, hearth and family kind of person. — © Joanna Newsom
I'm not a wanderer, which is funny because I'm on tour half the time. I'm a home, hearth and family kind of person.
I never thought people would be mortally offended by the sounds I was making.
I don't look at people's expressions, because I still get nervous when I play, especially when I first put the harp up there. I just try to tune - it takes me a half-hour to tune, and I get nervous if I look at anybody when I do it.
My voice in combination with the harp - which, by the way, I use because I've played it my entire life, not to make some statement about the harp - somehow has ... coloured people's interpretations of the music and projected an idea of childlike or fairytale quality or innocence. Which sometimes prevents people from listening to the songs the way I would like them to be listened to.
And all that we built, and all that we breathed And all that we spilled or pulled up like weeds Is piled up in back and it burns irrevocably And we spoke up in turns 'til the silence crept over me.
I didn't sing for years and years, but I started playing harp when I was maybe 9 or 10. I had actually wanted to play for years leading up to that, but no teacher in our little town would take me on as a student, because I was too young.
I didn't really know a lot of the history when I was younger. I didn't realize that the harp is coded in such a specific way in musical circles. It's kind of this society instrument because of its history as a young woman's parlor instrument.
We are blessed and sustained by what is not said
The so-called positive press has in some ways been more difficult to swallow than the negative.
Around eighth grade I decided I wanted to be a composer and that's what I went to college for. Just a few years back, I switched out of composition and into creative writing so I could work with words.
There's something fundamental to the harp that has retained its appeal my whole life. It's an instrument I am just in love with.
There are some mornings when the sky looks like a road. — © Joanna Newsom
There are some mornings when the sky looks like a road.
I have a voice that's obviously untrained - and I think untrainable - so I kind of secreted it away for a long time. Actually, I would write songs with lyrics when I was younger, but I would just sing in my head.
And a thimble's worth of milky moon Can touch hearts larger than a thimble.
It broke my heart when I learned the moon had been passing the sun’s light off as its own.
I had known that people would probably have strange reactions to my voice, because I have kind of an unwieldy, difficult voice, but I never thought that anybody would have a problem with the harp. I just assumed... C'mon, it's a beautiful instrument.
I wasn't born of a whistle or milked from a thistle at twilight No I was all horns and thorns sprung out fully formed, knock-kneed and upright.
If I ever met Dolly Parton for sure, I would just not be able to say anything. I love her.
We deserve to know light. And grow evermore lighter and lighter.
I have a lot of interest in interior rhyming; not just rhyming at the end of the lines, but playing around with rhymes within the lines, playing with where the syllabic emphases in the sentences are, lining those up at strange moments in the line of the song. I’m not sure if that comes across or not.
What a woman does is open doors. And it is not a question of locking or unlocking.
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