Top 50 Quotes & Sayings by Richie Sambora

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Richie Sambora.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Richie Sambora

Richard Stephen Sambora is an American rock guitarist, singer, songwriter and producer, best known as the lead guitarist of the rock band Bon Jovi from 1983 to 2013. He and lead singer Jon Bon Jovi formed the main songwriting unit for the band. He has also released three solo albums: Stranger in This Town in 1991, Undiscovered Soul in 1998, and Aftermath of the Lowdown released in September 2012.

That got me thinking. Bon Jovi kills in Jersey. Just kills. We did Atlantic City this past winter and man, you wouldn't believe the intensity in that crowd. Can I just talk for a minute about how amazingly hot Heather is?
You know, when you're an actor, you want to go to Hollywood. When you're a musician, you want to go to Nashville.
There's nothing like a love for our children. I love being a papa, and that's the truth. — © Richie Sambora
There's nothing like a love for our children. I love being a papa, and that's the truth.
I just want to thank everyone for their support. Sometimes friends need the help of their friends to get by.
A band is like a marriage, and if you're in a marriage with someone, and you lose yourself in that marriage, the relationship is over, really.
I was the lead singer in a lot of the bands I was in. You have to be comfortable. You gotta get up there and sell the song. You have to get up there and sell the lyric. You gotta be able to feel it.
I might have been a psychologist. It interests me.
You look at your bank account, and you see the currency of love and happiness is more important than the currency of money.
Going through the grief period of my dad and losing him - that was the worst thing because you know when you get that call. When you are seven, eight years old, you have that almost vision in your mind of what that's going to be like and what your going to feel like and it doesn't prepare you.
I'm all for sharing music, but when people can download a whole record and pay nothing for it and then they share it with 100,000 other people, it's breaking down the whole business.
I'm on a search for my future ex-wife.
I'm a lucky guy. I don't take for granted, for one minute, what I do.
I know Mick Jagger wouldn't tour without Keith Richards and call it the Rolling Stones. — © Richie Sambora
I know Mick Jagger wouldn't tour without Keith Richards and call it the Rolling Stones.
You know, no matter what I am or what I do for a living, I'm still, you know, the husband and the dad and the protector of the house, and I have to be conscientious about that.
The Garden State will never leave me.
I want the people of New Jersey to jump off a cliff like Kurt Vonnegut so I can show them how to fly. This way, nobody needs to grow any wings, which would be impossible anyway because we're humans and not some kind of bird.
I'm a homebody, really, when it comes down to it.
I always felt there was some kind of nobility centered in my desire and passion for what I do.
Being in America isn't old-hat - it's where we're from - but I get excited to be in other parts of the world like Athens and Croatia, which were quite cool. I'm a sightseer. I go see the sights and museums. I'm into that kind of thing.
I love being a dad. I'd have more kids if I could. I'd take a couple more, one or two more before I croak.
At the end of the day, if you're going to buy a can of Coke, you want the real thing.
I've spent a lot of Thanksgivings on the road with my band, so anytime that I can spend Thanksgiving with my family in a traditional aspect, eating sweet potatoes and cranberries and stuffing and all the trappings of Thanksgiving and then get on a treadmill the next day extra long, I'm happy.
I taught myself how to play the guitar, so I basically learned by a system of making mistakes.
I didn't check into rehab. Instead of me heading into a place - I was just drinking too much and I needed to get my life together. I'm still in therapy and stuff like that, but it's good. I'm great. I feel fine.
The early Bon Jovi stuff I can't stand. I just think we didn't have our stylistic voice. But some people love some of that stuff.
We've been around for almost three decades now - there's about three generations of Bon Jovi fans.
Throughout my career as a songwriter, I've had a knack for writing songs that were about me and my life experiences and observations.
I try to look at most of my solos as a musical piece within the song, not, say, showing off.
I will do anything for anybody that asks me to do anything for a kid.
When you walk out in front of an audience of over 70,000 people, you've got to be on your game. They deserve it.
Songwriting is something that's very daunting until you have your first successful song, I think.
I've had a very, very interesting view of the planet over the last 30 years, touring as excessively as I have. And music is the most evocative, transformative, connective force in humanity, man.
There are a lot of really good guitar sounds and new kind atmospheres on the new Bon Jovi record. I think people are going to dig it, man. And it rocks hard. — © Richie Sambora
There are a lot of really good guitar sounds and new kind atmospheres on the new Bon Jovi record. I think people are going to dig it, man. And it rocks hard.
Rock and roll is a contact sport. I enjoy playing the tunes that really get the people going.
Stand on the stage in front of 15 people or 15,000. Have them look up to you and tell you how wonderful you are, and if you don't think that's a great feeling, okay, then you're unlike me.
When you're making a record, you try to achieve stylistically what fits on you. Like a good old coat, you know what I mean?
Learning about all those different things psychologically - about grief and my own addictions and problems and stuff like that, and really getting an education on it, I think it was part of the process of it, learning about it and trying to lick it.
Songwriting is a give-and-take process, and it can lead to some good, healthy debates.
When you're sick on the road, it's the worst. That's when you become the most vulnerable and neurotic. You become scared. If I had a cold or a chest infection, and I had to sing all those high parts, there was stage fright.
As a musician and a guitar player, I can noodle as well as anybody. But from my background as a session musician, I always try to play what is called for by the lyric and listening to the song. As a writer, that's what I do, too.
Somehow, you need to cling to your optimism. Always look for the silver lining. Always look for the best in people. Try to see things through the eyes of a child. See the wonder in the simplest things. Never stop dreaming. Believe anything is possible.
For me, success is being able to give back to your friends, your family, your community, those in need and the world entire.
A man can never have too many pairs of sunglasses or too many guitars. — © Richie Sambora
A man can never have too many pairs of sunglasses or too many guitars.
I know Mick Jagger wouldn’t tour without Keith Richards and call it the Rolling Stones.
Embrace every challenge you have, every person you meet, every place you visit, every task you succeed at, and especially those at which you fail. You will learn from them all. You'll learn about the world at large and about other people but most important, you'll learn about yourself.
Solos are like sex, so it's surprising to me that there aren't more guys playing them
Dare to fail. If you never fail, you're never taken risks and that's no way to take on this life.
Be your own teacher. Let life write your textbook.
Seize every opportunity you have to learn. Keep your eyes and ears wide open and seize life — don't let the moments slip through your fingers like a fistful of sand. Be your own teacher. Let life write your textbook.
Don't look over your shoulder and don't use or abuse others to get ahead. Keep your eyes focused on your goals and keep working for what you believe in and what you want to accomplish.
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