Top 119 Quotes & Sayings by Kate Nash

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English musician Kate Nash.
Last updated on December 25, 2024.
Kate Nash

Kate Marie Nash is an English singer-songwriter and actress.

I once got asked in an interview: 'Does it annoy you that the majority of your fans are teenage girls?' I was insulted and angry because it was sexist and ageist.
Listening to Bikini Kill's Kathleen Hanna gave me the confidence I needed to get up on stage and be photographed every night on tour.
When I first started, in 2006, it was an exciting time. Independent, cool, weird artists were being successful, and magazines were writing about them, and people were getting played on radio that were, like, really good.
Filming 'Glow' helped with my confidence. — © Kate Nash
Filming 'Glow' helped with my confidence.
There were so many weird shows when we were younger. 'Clangers.' 'Button Moon.' 'The Moomins.' All very weird, but very cool too.
If you're on an indie label, you're not getting enough money. And if you're on a major, you're not getting enough support.
Sometimes it's hard for me to dress for normal situations. A lot of the time I'm either performing or travelling - so what I wear is either really fun or just really comfortable. For anything in between I think, 'Oh God, I don't know how to dress myself. But when I get on stage I'm just like, 'I can wear anything I want!'
When I was young I was listening to the Spice Girls and Destiny's Child. I was singing 'Independent Woman' and 'Survivor,' and it was all about Girl Power and being with your friends. I don't think I was singing, 'Don't cha wish your girlfriend was hot like me?'
When I'm not touring I really enjoy the ease of cooking at home.
I come from a big Irish family who force-fed me as a kid, so not eating was never an option.
MySpace was so punk.
I've a tiny little scar on my chin from when I fell over on stage, bust my chin open and bled everywhere.
It's really important to be a strong role model. It's one of my main things because I feel I've been exposed in such an extreme way to a lot of sexism.
I first got into punk music at 17, The Adverts, just from being a bored teenager. — © Kate Nash
I first got into punk music at 17, The Adverts, just from being a bored teenager.
On tour it's hard to be vegetarian, especially in Europe because vegetarianism is basically unheard of. They think you're either joking or mad.
The Walking Dead' is my show. I download it from iTunes so that I can watch it the second it comes out. It's a show that I've got really involved in, emotionally.
I've become aware of being in a very male-dominated industry where a door opens and it's like, 'Oh hello, it's 12 men and me. Again.'
People have said I'm too fat to be a pop star.
I'm worried about being pigeonholed as an artist, especially a female one, but I think, essentially, it's the music which people judge you by.
I never wanted to be like: 'Oh, just because I'm a singer I can be in films now.'
British summers give me a really happy feeling.
It is really amazing what you can do with your body and learning that your body has skills and a purpose, as a woman you are always taught that your body is like in the way, too big or just not perfect.
When I was younger, I'd always cry on Christmas Day, and I didn't know why. Now I know it's because I was just overwhelmed by the togetherness.
I would like to think that an artist's mental health is taken into consideration more now.
I always wear red lipstick.
It's great to be able to find a way to release your music and do what you want to do artistically and not have to just worry about being accepted by the major label industry.
I have really bad anxiety and OCD. I get afraid of everyone I know dying.
Everyone has self-esteem issues when they are a teenager, but I think you have to accept who you are, because otherwise you are going to have a really unhappy life.
I've got quite bushy eyebrows and brown eyes.
My mum's got morals and principles, and I've been brought up with those ideas and beliefs.
I get a bit overwhelmed by the number of shows I haven't seen, that are still on my bucket list.
Punk may have helped me find my voice and made me realise that I had the right to have one, but it was riot grrrl that helped me sustain that voice and shout a little louder.
You have to be cynical because this is a business. Everyone is making money out of you.
I think I was probably overworked. I was doing huge tours and having two days off and then going out again. It burned me out.
I started my own zine, and riot grrrl became a huge part of my identity.
I got £30 for my first gig, cash in hand.
I had heart surgery when I was 17.
Artists often have mental health issues. And their lifestyles are unstable because of all the travelling and the media commentary on their lives.
I didn't feel like I was allowed to be a songwriter. I thought I had to be a really intelligent lyricist, like a poet. — © Kate Nash
I didn't feel like I was allowed to be a songwriter. I thought I had to be a really intelligent lyricist, like a poet.
As many problems as there are with Hollywood, I feel so much more protected because if there's a serious issue, I have someone I can talk to. Where's that in the music industry? We need it.
I just wanna be an artist, like someone like Bjork and Kate Bush and Regina Spektor. These are people that have saved people, I think, by being what they are.
As you get older, you start to realise negativity is really bad.
A lot of young girls look up to me and it's amazing.
I never do anything just to be crude or in your face.
Forgiving yourself will help with giving yourself strength.
Even though I'm super into tarot and astrology, I don't believe in knowing too much about the future.
People are fragile. Our brains are fragile and you can only abuse them for so long.
The Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players are the most wonderful creatures.
One day when I was 14 I put together a makeshift CV and walked into this weird boutique in Pinner, near where I lived, to ask if they needed a Saturday assistant. They didn't, but the owner took me on anyway.
I'll always be playing shows. Even when I'm a crazy granny wearing weird old granny clothes and wandering around with dementia, I'll still be playing. Whether anyone else will turn up is another question.
I wouldn't mind working in restaurants again because you build up a relationship with the customers. I'm really inspired by the mundane - it's often the most ordinary-looking people who have the best stories - and you can watch diners and study their idiosyncrasies without them being aware of it.
When we're in London my family goes to mass on Christmas Eve. The next day Dad cooks the turkey on the barbecue, standing outside in the freezing cold. — © Kate Nash
When we're in London my family goes to mass on Christmas Eve. The next day Dad cooks the turkey on the barbecue, standing outside in the freezing cold.
Hair is so important and emotional. I dyed mine black and blond after a breakup - there's something really powerful about changing your hair when you're in a weird place.
When you're on tour, you know exactly what you're doing and what's required of you. There's a routine.
When you earn your own money you feel much better about yourself.
I love any excuse to dress up; my wardrobe's a bit like a fancy dress box.
I want to be in a Tarantino movie, more than anything in the world.
I love punks!
I got into punk at 17 after discovering an all-girl band from Long Island on the Internet called The Devotchkas - four crazy-looking girls with fast, driving basslines and high-pitched gang vocals who shared the same dress sense as the punks I used to eye up curiously in Camden.
I've met so many young women who are interested in being involved in music and I think, 'Why are you not actually doing it?' And I hope that if I tell my story, about the setbacks I had, they might not be afraid.
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