Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Kathleen Edwards

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian musician Kathleen Edwards.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Kathleen Edwards

Kathleen Edwards is a Canadian singer-songwriter and musician. Her 2002 debut album, Failer, contained the singles "Six O'Clock News" and "Hockey Skates". Her next two albums โ€“ Back to Me and Asking for Flowers โ€“ both made the Billboard 200 list and reached the top 10 of Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart. In 2012, Edwards' fourth studio album, Voyageur, became Edwards' first album to crack the top 100 and top 40 in the U.S., peaking at #39 on the U.S. Billboard 200 and #2 in Canada. In 2012, Edwards' song "A Soft Place To Land" won the SOCAN Songwriting Prize, an annual competition that honours the best song written and released by 'emerging' songwriters over the past year, as voted by the public. Her musical sound has been compared to Suzanne Vega meets Neil Young.

There aren't always answers for the questions you're looking for, so I have to make peace with that sometimes.
I'm a huge fan of a lot of different genres of music, and I really felt like somehow I had been pigeonholed a little bit - maybe of my own doing - and in a way where I felt like I was sort of falsely defined. What my music was being called wasn't really the music I was always listening to.
People are really set in their ways in how they produce records, and I was at least open enough to where I knew I wanted to do something totally different. โ€” ยฉ Kathleen Edwards
People are really set in their ways in how they produce records, and I was at least open enough to where I knew I wanted to do something totally different.
I didn't want to be this four-chord acoustic singer songwriter because that stuff just got so old to me.
I was being categorized as some kind of twangy songwriter. And that's just not how I see myself.
Co-writing is a very unnatural feeling. It's like wanting to document a feeling that you have and then trying to get someone else to describe it for you.
I really love music that's on the periphery of not fitting into a clear genre. I felt like I was constantly being described as something I didn't really feel like I identified with.
There's nothing more confirming in your life than looking in front of you and seeing some really amazing people who you care a lot about who care a lot about you.
I know I'm not the 'Indie It Girl' and I'll never have a big breakout, big runaway success. And that's okay.
I really get that some people like the roots-rock, storytelling thing that I was doing, and I'm proud of that.
You're reluctant to give too much away when you're going to put it out there for other people. It's harder writing your truest fears and loves and guilts, because you're not sure when you're writing the right story.
I find motion, literally, is where ideas come from. It's almost like a built-in rhythm section. The contents of the songs are about change, and a lot of that stuff happens when you're on tour, and you wake up and you're in a different place and you start thinking about where you're going and where you've been.
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