Top 116 Quotes & Sayings by Mat Kearney

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Mat Kearney.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Mat Kearney

Mathew William Kearney is an American musician born in Eugene, Oregon, and based in Nashville, Tennessee. So far, he has a total of five top 20 hits on the Adult Top 40 Chart.

My goal is to try to avoid a genre.
Being from Oregon, it's part of who I am.
I've always been a writer. I've always done writing or spoken-word, hip-hop stuff with my friends. — © Mat Kearney
I've always been a writer. I've always done writing or spoken-word, hip-hop stuff with my friends.
'Young Love' is about falling in love and dealing with your past so you can move forward. I wanted it to be a clear record.
Minneapolis has always been a very special place for me.
I can't help but do things my own way.
I've never shaped or crafted my music for any specific group of people. Whoever connects with it is fine with me. I don't care where they come from.
When we tour, there's always this unique quality to every town you visit... Touring, you get a sense of a collective identity for different cities. That's one of the things I love about my job.
New Yorkers are historically tough crowds.
I didn't know music would end up being my job, but I loved it so much I wanted to do it every day.
I never wanted to be on an exclusively Christian label.
You go to a Springsteen show, and half of the people are there to party and forget about their cares, and they're being drawn to this visceral experience. And then the other half, you know, has lived and died with his 'Nebraska' album and considers him one of the greatest poets.
I love what I do. I love playing music.
I've never been one to learn scales and do exercises. Maybe I'm lazy, but I just don't take to that kind of thing. Learning other people's songs is enjoyable, and my fingers tend to go to new places because I'm not playing my music, the stuff that comes naturally to me.
I read about two reviews early on when my first record came out, and it just freaked me out, good and bad, so I've never really kept up with that side of it. — © Mat Kearney
I read about two reviews early on when my first record came out, and it just freaked me out, good and bad, so I've never really kept up with that side of it.
Generally, the songs that are the scariest ones are the ones that people connect to.
I'm a '90s music kid.
I would sit in my dorm room and write songs. I loved it. I was learning to sing and play guitar. I was becoming a musician. I was the beginner who somehow could write a song.
Golf was big in my family.
I grew up in Oregon, so there was always a lot of that folksy, Bob Marley stuff. There was a mural of Bob Marley on a wall at my high school.
I was always into poetry and writing. So the urgency of spoken word is something that really has always appealed to me.
I enjoy changing; I think it's more fun to try something different than to just do what you did last time. As an artist, you just want to keep creating, keep finding a place that really inspires you that feels fresh and new, and keep it exciting.
The criticism people could have of my music maybe is that it's somewhat schizophrenic at times. And if you don't like that, it could bother you.
It's been awesome going indie. I don't need to be on a major label. I love not having to walk into a specific radio person's office to try to convince someone to play my songs. At the end of the day, it's more work, but I've discovered that I like to get my hands dirty.
I never got too specialized but did like the Southern Gothic writers like William Faulkner and Flannery O'Connor.
I didn't start writing music until I was a sophomore in college. I would steal my roommate's guitar and sit on the front porch and kind of blend this weird spoken word and these little melodies over simple chords; that really started my whole journey as a musician.
I don't know how much I'm connected to the hip-hop scene, but I definitely lend from that urgency.
It's a job, and it's challenging. But I love music and creating. That's why I got into music.
The first album was literally the first 12 songs I've ever written.
My dad was a scratch golfer growing up. When I'm on the road, I always bring my clubs with me.
I had the lyric 'Chip Don't Go' and a few words, and my wife came in and said that it sounded like a good song. I thought I'd finish writing it up and posting it to YouTube. I didn't realize it was going to take off like it did.
I think coming from the Northwest is something that's born in your blood. On my mom's side, I'm, like, a sixth-generation Oregonian. My family came over in the covered wagons, 'Oregon Trail'-video-game style. Maybe the pioneer mentality runs in my blood because they were all pioneers.
Growing up in Eugene, Oregon, there was everything from The Notorious B.I.G. to Weezer playing in my car.
I do know great books help shape who I am and how I look at life.
There's something incredibly vulnerable about middle school for me. We're really impressionable during that period. The cement's still wet, so to speak, and a lot of things later in life are born during that season.
When I barely got into college, the one thing I could do was write, so I became an English major.
I was an English major in college, so I really liked spoken word and poetry; it was what I did before I wrote music.
It's silly to throw things out or label things. You know, is U2 a Christian band, or was Johnny Cash a Christian country singer? I don't know, but they're pretty open about their faith.
I thought my second record was good, but it didn't have that smash hit we did on the first one that somehow found its way onto tons of formats of radio stations. — © Mat Kearney
I thought my second record was good, but it didn't have that smash hit we did on the first one that somehow found its way onto tons of formats of radio stations.
For my father, he didn't know what 'Grey's Anatomy' was. He didn't know who John Mayer was. But when I showed up on the 'Law & Order' TNT promo spot, he thought, 'Wow, my son has made it.'
I'm actually named Matthew William Kearney: my middle name is named after my grandfather.
I think I have always made really beat-driven pop-rock records.
I think the way I love talking about my faith is through my story because I think that's all we have to work with sometimes. I think it's the most moving way to share your story, too - is what you know, what you've seen and heard and tasted and felt.
There are a lot of great recording artists, like Jack White and Jack Johnson, who stay confined inside a very small box, but I'm more like Bon Iver, who recorded an album with programmed drums, and the next record was totally organic. I get that.
The problem in this country is people gravitate toward one genre, and that's what they embrace. I don't understand that. If you hit me with Bell Biv Devoe meets country, well, I like the sound of that concept.
I don't spend afternoons practicing my guitar to get better. I do read, though, to get inspiration for my lyrics.
I'm really influenced by '90s hip hop. A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul were my heroes growing up.
I've had moments in my career when I've made more money and had more success than at other times, but I've realized being happy has very little to do with any of that.
From my experience, I've been honest about who I am and what I believe and the motivation behind my music. But I've played it in arenas that are for all people. I've pretty much stuck to that model my whole career.
I think, in a lot of ways, hip-hop is interesting to me because it's like the modern-day folk music. — © Mat Kearney
I think, in a lot of ways, hip-hop is interesting to me because it's like the modern-day folk music.
All of my acoustic playing came from my songwriting. All of the chords I've learned and all of the voicings I play them in are a direct result of composing.
When I first started writing music, it was to express that. I was trying to find God and trying to find meaning in my life. That's what my music was about. It wasn't to entertain.
I love Michigan.
Hopefully, reading and being around great literature inspires me to write songs, but I'm not sure about that.
More than any other instrument, the relationship between an acoustic guitar and a microphone is super-important. The kind of mics that you use and your placement of the mics to the guitar can radically alter your sound.
God found me when I was at my lowest point. That was the first time in my life when I really felt like I understood who Jesus was - it was more than just knowing about Him: I felt like He met me in that time and place.
When I started forming my own taste, there was a period in high school when I listened to only rap and hip-hop, like A Tribe Called Quest.
Choosing an acoustic guitar for a live setting can be different from picking out one for recording. One doesn't always work for the other. The sonic properties can be vastly different.
There's this song called 'Brad Chester,' which is like the depths of my family. It comes from a very personal place.
When my first record came out, it was in the middle of the real Muse, Keane, British thing, and that beat-driven thing wasn't really that cool at the moment.
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