Top 119 Quotes & Sayings by John Densmore

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician John Densmore.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
John Densmore

John Paul Densmore is an American musician, songwriter, author and actor. He is best known as the drummer of the rock band the Doors, and as such is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He appeared on every recording made by the band, with drumming inspired by jazz and world music as much as by rock and roll.

If you surrender to the communal vision, sometimes, certainly in our case, you become more than the sum of your parts.
The whole world is hopefully heading toward democracy.
I'm happy with how 'Feast Of Friends' finally turned out. It's been bootlegged so much, and of course, the quality was always crappy with those things. — © John Densmore
I'm happy with how 'Feast Of Friends' finally turned out. It's been bootlegged so much, and of course, the quality was always crappy with those things.
When I was in my 20s I went through my testosterone phase and had a Mercedes to show that I'm rich, and they used to call me 'Jaguar John.' I'm older now, and I'm concerned about the environment and... appreciate a car that doesn't pollute.
I remember thinking: 'Why is Jim's face so big?' on the cover of our first album, 'The Doors.' Probably because it wouldn't have sold a lot of copies if it were my face!
Money is like fertiliser. When spread around, things grow; when it's hoarded, it stinks.
In the '50s, West L.A. was like Kansas.
Eddie Vedder? My God, there's a singer.
Jim Morrison wrote the words for 'Hello, I Love You' when we were still in a band called Rick & the Ravens.
I'm not against a new band doing commercials to pay the rent.
At the risk of sounding grandiose, I will say that, to me, rock 'n' roll is sacred.
A major component of jazz is improvisation, which forces you to stay in the moment because you never know what will be coming up. There's a lot of freedom and space available as you improvise around the chord changes.
It's your inner life that's the most important. — © John Densmore
It's your inner life that's the most important.
I grew up listening to my parents' albums. Many of them were either classical - Bach, Beethoven and Brahms - or easy listening, like Mantovani. I loved the spectrum of emotions in classical music, from fortissimo to pianissimo. My early passion for classical made my drumming more musical later on.
Jim was Dionysus, but it took three Apollos to balance that Dionysian energy. He was a force.
I sometimes joke that I'm half Jewish, because I was raised Catholic... and we share 'the guilt.'
In my old age, I've learned that if I put the right cymbal crash in the very right spot, exactly, it can be as powerful as all my showoff drum rolls in my 20s.
We knew we were tight and good, but we didn't know we were going to be the band to help each generation cut its umbilical cord.
Sometimes I'll be in an elevator and I'll hear a corny instrumental version of 'Light My Fire.'
I don't like totally free jazz, unless it's done by somebody like Coltrane, who did bebop and cool jazz, so he was allowed to go out there.
I had no clue of Hollywood until I became a teenager. Then I got a fake ID in Tijuana and discovered Shelly's Manne-Hole, on Cahuenga and Selma, where I saw John Coltrane and his piano player, McCoy Tyner, and Elvin Jones, the drummer - my idol.
We were not folk-rock. We would scare people.
My mom, Peggy, was a free spirit. She loved music and liked to paint. She had received her degree from Chouinard Art Institute in L.A.
When I do a press roll, I use the traditional grip. Sometimes I flip it around; for a louder crack on the two and four, I use the new grip.
Ravi Shankar was an incredible teacher. I sat on stage with Robby Krieger and studied at his school of Indian music here in L.A., so at Royce Hall we were sitting next to him watching his hands bleed while he got possessed. This is the highest level you can get.
Most of what is said by candidates on the right is half-baked truths and fabrications coated in 'patriotism or family values.'
In the '60s, the Sunset Strip became insane. The sidewalks and the traffic were jammed. It was a renaissance.
As long as there's young people, they can look to Jim to help them cut the umbilical chord.
I like myself being a survivor.
Writing is looking for music between sentences.
I like connecting new synapses. Like Jim Morrison did.
We used to build our cities and towns around churches. Now banks are at the centers of our densely populated areas.
I'm not the fastest drummer in the world, but I'm very into dynamics and knowing that there's space in between the notes and you got to breathe.
I like driving at least a part-time electric car because there's nothing coming out of the tailpipe. That's very important to me.
If I had been the drummer for the Grassroots, it probably wouldn't have cut me to the core when I heard John Lennon's 'Revolution' selling tennis shoes... and Nikes, to boot! That song was the soundtrack to part of my youth, when the streets were filled with passionate citizens expressing their First Amendment right to free speech.
For us, anyone can record our songs. Anyone can cover our songs.
Well, I've discovered that I really like writing, and I feel that I'm good at it.
One has to be always be on guard, because mega-success comes up behind you when you're high from all the attention, and sucks the vitality out of one's creativity. — © John Densmore
One has to be always be on guard, because mega-success comes up behind you when you're high from all the attention, and sucks the vitality out of one's creativity.
Robby had a flamenco and folk music background. I was so enamored with watching Robby's fingers crawl across the flamenco guitar strings like a crab.
Everyone is so desperate to get attention for their project, they will do almost anything, and the corporate world has always encouraged this.
I still think that if one of Jim's masterpieces were downgraded to sell crap, I would get sick.
I really wanted to be in Love - they were making it. But I was in the demon Doors.
We all liked Elektra because it was a boutique label. 'Oh, my God, we can be on the same label as Paul Butterfield!'
Ray grew up in Chicago so he had the blues, Muddy Waters and all that. He also had classical training. That was pretty cool. That was invoked in the intro to 'Light My Fire,' which was very kind of Bach-like.
Wouldn't it be nice if human nature could learn stuff before we get to the brink? It seems we have to experience it first.
Bass players and drummers are like brothers, working in the basement, cooking up the groove. If they don't lock together with the feel, the ensemble will suck.
If somebody makes a really wonderful, ecological car, I'm down, no matter where it comes from.
You hear a Willie Nelson solo, he doesn't play real fast, but it's so melodic and beautiful. It's kind of, to be human is to have space and not show all your stuff all the time.
Jim had melodies as well as words. He didn't know how to play a chord on any instrument, but he had melodies in his head. To remember the lyrics he would think of melodies and then they would stay in his head. He had melodies and lyrics in his head, and he would sing them a cappella, and we would eke out the arrangements.
When rock loses integrity it's time for renewal. — © John Densmore
When rock loses integrity it's time for renewal.
Echo & the Bunnymen just copied 'People Are Strange,' which is cool, we made some money, thanks. But when an artist finds a new interpretation of one of your songs, that's great. It turns your head around.
Everybody is a seeker to a degree.
I had the first XJ6 and then they became real popular with lawyers so I had to move on. The only problem with Jaguar is that you have to go to the gas station every couple blocks, and a mechanic once told me that if you don't have the right attitude when you walk up to a Jag, it won't start.
Pete Townshend keeps fooling us again, selling Who songs to yuppies hungry for SUVs.
In the 1950s, my family first lived in West Los Angeles. Dad was studying architecture at USC and we didn't have a lot of money. He'd buy crumbling fixer-uppers, make repairs and sell them for a small profit. Then we'd move on. My early childhood image of him is standing on a ladder and sanding the front door.
Legislating morality doesn't work (see: Prohibition). It produced the Mafia.
You know, another jazz drummer, Ed Thigpen, who played with Oscar Peterson way back - it was the first time I ever heard rivets in a cymbal. And then I heard that Chico Hamilton had them too, and I went, 'Oh, that's it. I'm taking that for my sound.' And it worked well on 'Riders On The Storm,' so that's one thing.
When I was 15, we settled in Santa Monica, in a beige suburban ranch house. By then, my father, Ray, was an architect at Welton Becket's firm. He was handy with a pencil and pen. His figurative drawings were very good, and his talent was intimidating.
I got Cs in English at school. I hated it. But now I want to be a writer and I'm voracious for new vocabulary and new ideas.
Creativity and self-destruction sometimes come in the same package.
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