Top 23 Quotes & Sayings by Rita Coolidge

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

Rita Coolidge is an American recording artist. During the 1970s and 1980s, her songs were on Billboard magazine's pop, country, adult contemporary, and jazz charts, and she won two Grammy Awards with fellow musician and then-husband Kris Kristofferson. Her recordings include "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," "We're All Alone", "I'd Rather Leave While I'm in Love" and the theme song for the 1983 James Bond film Octopussy: "All Time High".

My grandmother passed at 104. She sang and wrote songs until she passed.
You know, I'm pretty much an open book.
The month of September is Women in Jazz, so I'm doing jazz there in September. I'm in for the duration. — © Rita Coolidge
The month of September is Women in Jazz, so I'm doing jazz there in September. I'm in for the duration.
I choose things by how they resonate in my heart.
There was a subtlety about Peggy Lee. It was powerful. There was a valuable use of space. Everything was not cluttered. Her voice was out front and was the key instrument.
I say what's in my heart, and I do it in my concerts.
I wanted to make a jazz record. I didn't want it to be a standards record.
I was kind of known as a ballad singer. People would send ballads. Some of them would go over my shoulder and float off the top of my head, and I just didn't feel anything. Then I would hear a song that would absolutely shake me.
Too often, the opportunity knocks, but by the time you push back the chain, push back the bolt, unhook the two locks and shut off the burglar alarm, it's too late.
I've got my whole life. There's a lifetime of experience, a lifetime of experiencing the road and the music and different players. It makes me a richer human being. I have a greater source of information to tap into, a wealth of life.
If I'm driving to L.A. and have anxiety about making the drive, if I've got Peggy with me, we're cool.
I recorded my first jazz record in the '70s.
When I sang that song, I felt it was almost as if some force had moved into my body. Things like that have only happened to me singing jazz. It doesn't happen when singing pop. I get so deeply into the music, it feels like I've become someone else.
Universal was absolutely marvelous about sitting down with me and listening to my input. It wasn't something where they chose a bunch of songs that were best sellers. They did a marvelous job on the packaging. It's a beautiful tribute.
It seems that jazz is more cerebral and more mathematical in a sense.
I've always wanted to record a jazz record. I did one in the '70s with Barbara Carroll. It's been a journey.
I've always loved jazz.
I don't think I was considered to be a cabaret singer because I didn't have patter that was written.
Possibly, I should have been a jazz singer from the beginning.
Jazz radio is not very friendly to pop singers who decide to make a jazz record. But a lot of people have been. A lot of the people I've talked to like the record. — © Rita Coolidge
Jazz radio is not very friendly to pop singers who decide to make a jazz record. But a lot of people have been. A lot of the people I've talked to like the record.
I think you have to have a jazz pedigree to be on jazz radio.
I think the challenges for me was to go into the studio with these incredible jazz players and come up to their level of excellence. That's always a challenge.
I'm not stopping. My dream has come true, and I'm staying.
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