Top 104 Quotes & Sayings by Paul Rodgers

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English musician Paul Rodgers.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Paul Rodgers

Paul Rodgers is a British singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. He was the lead vocalist of numerous bands, including Free, Bad Company, The Firm, and The Law. He has also performed as a solo artist, and collaborated with the remaining active members of Queen under the moniker Queen + Paul Rodgers. A poll in Rolling Stone magazine ranked him number 55 on its list of the "100 Greatest Singers of All Time". In 2011 Rodgers received the British Academy's Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music.

When I left Free back in 1972, I didn't play 'All Right Now' until about 1996, when I was touring with Jason Bonham, and we were supporting the tribute record we had done to Muddy Waters.
If you look at my history, my history is that of forming bands rather than joining them.
I love it when people come from all over the place in separate vehicles, and they all come to this venue and become one energy. When that happens, it's a very magical thing. I think that helps the world go around, and it's what we do as performers - bring people together.
Nobody should attempt to do Freddie Mercury impressions. — © Paul Rodgers
Nobody should attempt to do Freddie Mercury impressions.
I am proud to be a Canuck.
With any band, there's two sides - there's the image, and there's the music.
When I play solo, that's when I put it all together. I go through all of the songs that I've written wtih all of the different bands; that, for me, tells its own story, and the DVDs really enforce that.
I tend to want to form bands and then create new music within them. Queen was an exception, and we joined forces because it just seemed to work when we played together.
One doesn't have to sit through exams and go to universities to play rock n' roll.
In order to write music, you need lots of Tabasco sauce.
The first record I bought was actually Booker T and the MG's 'Red Beans and Rice.'
I think it is tiring to listen to digital music for too long.
I was brought up in a fairly emotionally repressed kind of society in Northeast England where one didn't express emotions and was expected to keep a stiff upper lip.
Of course I was a fan when I was a kid. That's what made me get into it, the whole rock n' roll fantasy. — © Paul Rodgers
Of course I was a fan when I was a kid. That's what made me get into it, the whole rock n' roll fantasy.
'That's How Strong My Love Is' carries a message that resonates with the broken-hearted, and most of us have been there.
I'm a big fan of Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac.
I've always been a Jeff Beck fan. Who isn't? He is in a league of his own.
I carry my own tea, food, and Tabasco on the plane with me.
There were personality clashes in Free, really. I think it's as simple as that; I think we felt we weren't leaving each other enough room to develop in our own way, and we were restricting each other. So we said, let's go different ways.
Only Freddie Mercury could do Freddie Mercury. He was absolutely brilliant - I loved him to pieces, and I had a great deal of respect for him.
I just try to keep an open mind, and that's the way a lot of good things happen.
I didn't really like the '80s, to be honest with you. There was some good music that came out, but it went a bit disco for me.
I toured with Lynyrd Skynyrd as a solo artist, many years ago. I love those guys.
Artists like Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, Albert King, Ann Peebles, Isaac Hayes, and so many more gave me hope when I was an angst-filled teenager trying to make sense of it all... They were my teachers. Through their music, I learned how to live, how to be true to myself, and how to tell my story as a songwriter the way that I was feeling it.
When I was in my teen years and in my 20s and even 60s, it was okay to drop everything and disappear and become a road warrior for all those months. But after a while you get... y'know, one likes to have some home life.
A song isn't finished until it's played live, and then it moves on.
I got the idea of what a band should be from listening to Booker T and Otis Redding.
When you can touch the spirit, whatever that is, and when you can feel the love, and you can feel the song is cooking and it's in the pocket, you know, everybody knows that's the one that's grooving.
I have a lot of analog. I think a lot of people do. There are a lot of people that are re-discovering it. I still have a lot of my old records from back in the day. It's a joy to play things like Junior Wells' 'Hoodoo Man Blues,' and John Mayall & The Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton. There's a warmth that you can still feel.
I don't like lyrics to be overbearing. I like them to say something. But I'm not trying to change the world overnight. Something simple and understandable that people can relate their own everyday experiences to.
I've been influenced by so many great people , like Sam Moore, Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, John Lee Hooker, B.B. King, so many great blues and soul artists that I completely revere. So it's strange for me, actually, to hear somebody say, 'Oh, I was deeply influenced by your music.'
Horses are such a powerful part of human development and have been since the early ages. We humans owe them so much.
Songs do write themselves through you; I know people find it hard to believe, but it's true.
If not for music in my life as a young person, who knows where I would have focused my energy.
I loved the 'Free Spirit' tour and the guys who helped create the magic: Pete Bullick, Rich Newman, Ian Rowley and Gerard 'G' Louis.
Otis Redding, his voice, there was something spiritual and unworldly and at the same time, very deeply connected with the human connection and the way one feels about life in general, love, life, and everything, really.
As a performer, the thing that I love is to see people come together.
With Free, we had phased out all of the blues material and wanted to phase in all original material, and the only song that stayed from our blues past was 'The Hunter' by Albert King. People just loved that. And I said, 'We have to write a song that will top that - otherwise, what are we doing here?' That was the birth of 'All Right Now.'
After leaving Queen, I decided to stop doing those mega-four-month tours. I go out for a month, and my dog recognizes me when I come home. — © Paul Rodgers
After leaving Queen, I decided to stop doing those mega-four-month tours. I go out for a month, and my dog recognizes me when I come home.
I always think the audience should be part of the show.
Life is so mundane, isn't it? It's great to hear a guitarist getting into it and the rhythmic section blasting, even if it's all meaningless.
A song like 'Shooting Star' - the thought process behind writing that song was that I looked around and thought, 'Wow, there's a lot of people dying at that time in the music business.'
I had a band when I was 14, and we would play around in my hometown of Middlesbrough, and we'd go to the club afterwards, which was the Purple Onion then. There would be live bands playing, and in between that, the DJ would be playing records.
When I was 14, I heard Otis Redding in a club local to me, and I was blown away. It leaped out at me and went straight to my heart. I set my sights on singing like that.
There's a lot of trickery that can go on in the studio, and there's a lot that one can do - none of which I am interested in even slightly. I mean, you can actually tune vocals and stuff like that, but it's so hideous, I can't believe it.
Ann Wilson has an amazing voice and is a brilliant songwriter.
There is magic on earth.
Every day, every time I sing, I feel blessed, really, to be able to do that. It's like having wings, in a way. It's a bit like flying sometimes, because you go off into another realm. And a whole lot of people come with you. It's amazing.
'Shooting Star' started out as the arrangement on the record, and it's developed into a real audience-participation song, just from playing it. — © Paul Rodgers
'Shooting Star' started out as the arrangement on the record, and it's developed into a real audience-participation song, just from playing it.
Soul and blues were a definite influence on me. It was raw and naked emotion which you didn't get much where I come from.
We come from a generation where the music was very innovative, a lot of it coming out of blues and influenced by blues: the idea was that you would jam on things, and you'd try things out. You took a journey, and you took a left turn, and you experimented live right there in the moment.
The one thing I loved about blues and soul was the way they taught the world how to express such deep feelings.
One overindulges when you're younger, and you pay the price in later years. But I always realized how important it was for me to take care of myself and my voice if I was gonna have a voice when I was older.
Without music in schools' curriculum, there is a void for young people to express, explore, and experience music.
You go through periods of times where bands are calling the shots, and then sometimes, you've got the record companies calling the shots. I think it has to be a bit of both to make the thing work.
Live music is where you get the inspiration and the creativity.
When we formed Bad Company, I looked around and asked, 'Who is the biggest rock band in the world?' The answer was undoubtedly Led Zeppelin. Peter Grant was their manager, so we got him to work with us. That made the difference for Bad Company.
You've had all that punk and New Wave thing, and I think people have really got sick up to here with it. I know I have.
One of my dreams was always to have a piano - a room with a piano overlooking the ocean or a lake.
Being in a band is all-consuming, and I like to have a life.
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