Top 29 Quotes & Sayings by Rachael Yamagata

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American singer Rachael Yamagata.
Last updated on September 16, 2024.
Rachael Yamagata

Rachael Yamagata is an American singer-songwriter and pianist from Arlington, Virginia. She began her musical career with the band Bumpus before becoming a solo artist and releasing five EPs and four studio albums. Her songs have appeared on numerous television shows and she has collaborated with Jason Mraz, Rhett Miller, Bright Eyes, Ryan Adams, Toots and the Maytals and Ray Lamontagne.

I'm a big believer that there's a reason for everything. I'm a hopeless optimist.
I treasure my mornings. I get up early and ignore everything work-related for the first few hours. It's just me and my coffee addiction.
I wish you health, and more than wealth, I wish you love — © Rachael Yamagata
I wish you health, and more than wealth, I wish you love
Flute was actually my first instrument. I had a year of lessons and then stopped after feeling like I was going to faint all of the time.
I used to find places in high school and college, empty rooms or spaces with pianos. Instead of going to a party, I'd play alone for hours. It became my buddy.
In love relationships, there's such intimacy, and the potential to be the most vulnerable and honest and raw with another person. Why can't we have that transparency with everyone in our lives and reach that higher connection?
Follow your instincts, and handle all with respect and diplomacy.
As I grow older, what I find interesting is that I get experience with pain, different types of pain, and I start to see the lovely hilarity of life. Things that were once so crushing take on a different essence. I move through it at a faster rate. It's like traveling: it opens my eyes. My process is to allow myself to have it and to not judge myself or the situation too much, and then to create something with it.
I can sit and dissect for hours, and then write 50 songs about. I always find that inspiring.
My breaking heart and I agree, that you and I could never be, so with my best...my very best, I set you free
I immediately target sadness and conflict and disruption in life.
I do have faith that something better is always coming for you.
If you hold on to certain things that are comfortable and maybe a bad pattern for you psychologically, then you rob yourself of the experience of the next thing that happens when you do start to let go. It's only by trusting that, and by the leaps of faith, that you remember that's true.
Hopefully, my tears are worth something to the outside world.
My own brain. When I get it out of the way, I'm fine.
I'm addicted to the dynamics of relationships whether they be in love, work, between strangers on the streets, or in the world in general.
Pain is a huge gift. It can expand you like nothing else. If you can embrace it and sink into it, you'll get to the point where you can bend and transform your experience of it. Having some sort of creative outlet to do that is another gift.
There's something about [pain] that excites me. If I'm feeling really awful about something, it's because I haven't experienced it before. There's something I need to learn from it.
Writing and performing are to me what water and movement are to sharks.
People who know my music think I'm the most depressed girl on the planet.
It's easy for me to be vulnerable and craft songs when I'm being a hermit in my woods loft, secluded. When I get attention for it, whether it's on stage or in life - I have sort of a love-hate relationship with all of it. That makes me feel really stark naked.
Conflict is a great thing to start with. For me as a songwriter, I am constantly trying to solve problems.
What tries to break us is endlessly fascinating to me. Joy is a whole different game to express. — © Rachael Yamagata
What tries to break us is endlessly fascinating to me. Joy is a whole different game to express.
So for those of you falling in love, Keep it kind, keep it good, keep it right. Throw yourself in the midst of danger, But keep one eye open at night.
I wrote my first song when I was twelve on the piano.
Everyone is more than what you see on the cover; we all run deep and have our story.
Love could solve everything.
I don't really usually write sort of a cheerleader-type lyric.
I once heard someone doing a karaoke version of my song. That was pretty funny.
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