Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Rhiannon Giddens

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Rhiannon Giddens.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Rhiannon Giddens

Rhiannon Giddens is an American musician. She is a founding member of the country, blues and old-time music band Carolina Chocolate Drops, where she is the lead singer, fiddle player, and banjo player.

I think songs can have different lives.
I think that we definitely want to experiment, and if there's a hip-hop song that we like, we'll cover it. We don't want to be one of those bands that's like, you know, you know - Carolina Chocolate Drops does hip-hop. I mean, just know - you know, if it naturally works itself in, you know, cool.
When I first got into string-band music I felt like such an interloper. It was like I was sneaking into this music that wasn't my own... I constantly felt the awkwardness of being the raisin in the oatmeal.
You know, I really feel a responsibility to the music, and I teach workshops in music sometimes. And folks do come to me and they go, 'How do I make this blues song my own? How do I feel like I'm not an impostor doing this?' And I'm like, 'That's an excellent question.' That's where you should start, where you go, 'How does this speak to me?'
Black women have historically had the most to lose and have therefore been the fiercest fighters for justice. — © Rhiannon Giddens
Black women have historically had the most to lose and have therefore been the fiercest fighters for justice.
Know thy history. Let it horrify you; let it inspire you.
At some point you have to take responsibility for who you are and where you are and being able to listen to other points of view, whichever side of the tracks you're on.
I love the U.K. folk scene. In the States, nobody knows what to do with me. There's still a very narrow definition of Americana.
In order to understand the history of the banjo, and the history of bluegrass music, we need to move beyond the narrative we've inherited, beyond generalizations that bluegrass is mostly derived from a Scotch-Irish tradition with influences from Africa. It is actually a complex Creole music that comes from multiple cultures.
I'm so interested in the feminism of women in American music. These ladies, going out on the road, way before the opportunities and advantages that I have - it was absolutely rough out there. The fact that they were still able to get their art out there and do what they're doing is really impressive to me.
I used to subscribe to Nintendo Power. The first issue had 'Mario 2,' and it had all the characters rendered in clay. So I started making all of these characters out of clay.
White people are so fragile, God bless 'em. 'Well, I didn't own slaves.' No you didn't. Nobody is asking you to take personal responsibility for this. But you're a beneficiary of a system that did. Just own that and move on.
My work as a whole is about excavating and shining a light on pieces of history that not only need to be seen and heard, but that can also add to the conversation about what's going on now.
I kind of have found my identity through the music, through the roots music of North Carolina, and kind of realized that that's my identity as a North Carolinian.
Nobody can know what their legacy is going to be, you know? — © Rhiannon Giddens
Nobody can know what their legacy is going to be, you know?
I decided to study music my last year in high school.
I'm still black in the eyes of America.
What's really interesting to me is to have a connection to what was going on in the past, but to make it a living thing.
To sit in my concert and be uncomfortable is brave. Because you could always leave, you know?
Getting into the banjo and discovering that it was an African-American instrument, it totally turned on its head my idea of American music - and then, through that, American history.
I'm a North Carolina native. Grew up in North Carolina.
African-American history is American history.
My stuff lives in Nashville but I live wherever my children are.
The question is not how do we get diversity into bluegrass, but how do we get diversity back into bluegrass?
People say, 'I'm tired of thinking about race, it's a drag.' Yeah, well, welcome to my life! I don't care who you are. We have the time and the headspace for this stuff. The least you can do is take a moment.
When you sit at the feet of an elder, it changes you.
Each song has its own way that it likes to be done, but it can be more than one way. If you tap into it, you can feel it.
So my mom's folks are from one side of Greensboro - and, you know, outside of Greensboro. And my dad's folks, the white side, is from another very small town outside of Greensboro. So both sides are coming from the country.
Well, you know, the original banjos were all handmade instruments. Gourd - it would be made with gourds and whatever, you know, materials would have been around. And, you know, first hundred years of its existence, the banjo's known as a plantation instrument, as a black instrument, you know?
People think art comes out of strife. No, art comes out of love, and it comes out of freedom, and it comes out of feeling safe, and it comes out of feeling embraced by the vibe and by the energy. That's when you can make your best stuff.
History is my biggest teacher.
There is a black folk music audience. They're just very small.
We have to talk about the negativity, but we have to enjoy the beauty of what this country, culturally, has done.
I mean, my training at Oberlin has been absolutely valuable.
We're not here as a black band playing white string band music. You know, we play stuff in the Appalachians, we play stuff in the white community, but we really highlight the black community's music.
It's really funny how I've come round to classical music around the back door with my banjo in my hand, and I love it.
Every song has a heart, and I just go for that.
I like Queen Latifah.
The best part of a MacArthur is having some pressure taken off from touring relentlessly.
I'm not gonna force something or fake something to try to get more black people at my shows. I'm not gonna do some big hip-hop crossover. — © Rhiannon Giddens
I'm not gonna force something or fake something to try to get more black people at my shows. I'm not gonna do some big hip-hop crossover.
When you hear composer, you think, like, Beethoven: guy in a powdered wig, at a piano, furiously scribbling on manuscript paper. That's not the only image that a composer should bring up, you know. But that's kind of what we've said it is.
There are people who have incredible stories that we don't talk about. People who did amazing things, men and women who faced incredible odds, and there's nothing wrong with them being heroes for once, you know?
Ibn Said's autobiography is an extraordinary work, and his story is one that's absolutely crucial to tell.
We have been fed so many false narratives, many of them racialized to deliberately feed a racist agenda. It's important to address and dig into that wherever you can.
Separation in culture and arts does nobody any favors except for the people in power. That's just it... So I feel like I'm in the business of challenging that narrative.
My dad's white, my mom's black, and I've struggled with being mixed race.
When I do Gaelic music, I've learned about Gaelic culture; I've tried to learn the language. Whenever I do mouth music and there's Gaelic speakers in the audience, and they come up and go, 'Good job,' I'm always like, 'Phew.'
It's not about me, it's about the music. I don't do this because I want to be a star. I don't do this because I want to make a lot of money.
I stood on people's shoulders, so I want to be there for somebody else to take it even further.
When I first heard the minstrel banjo - I played a gourd first - I almost lost my mind. I was like, Oh, my god. And then I went to Africa, to the Gambia, and studied the akonting, which is an ancestor of the banjo, and just that connection to me was just immense.
I'm not good at planning ahead because it's just too much. I plan, set it up and then don't think about it again until it's almost time. That's just how it goes. — © Rhiannon Giddens
I'm not good at planning ahead because it's just too much. I plan, set it up and then don't think about it again until it's almost time. That's just how it goes.
I'm not an urban black person. I'm a country black person.
You have to find the balance of figuring out how can I be effective? How can I use my platform for good, you know, without jeopardizing everything so that I don't have that platform anymore.
I really got into Gaelic music and the whole sound of it, and I got to go to Scotland.
The truth, the real history, is way more interesting and representative of what America actually is.
For me the bare feet are grounding. I'm connected to the Earth in a way that I cannot be any other way.
I remember so vividly the first time I saw one of Marshall Wyatt's superb compilations called 'Folks He Sure Do Pull Some Bow' and seeing a picture of a black fiddler and freaking out. I had stumbled upon the hidden legacy of the black string band and I wanted to know more.
People seem ready for a more in-depth idea of folk music, culture and history.
I had this dream like years ago. I had this dream - I wanted to be in an all-black string band.
I would be thrilled with anybody who cites my work as something that inspired them.
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