A Quote by Frank Sinatra Jr.

I wanted to be a composer. — © Frank Sinatra Jr.
I wanted to be a composer.
Originally, I wanted to be a composer. I always tell people, 'I think of myself as a composer.'
Originally, I wanted to be a composer. I always tell people, 'I think of myself as a composer.
I always wanted to be a composer, and I sort of went in to NYU as pre-med because I just thought, 'Well... who actually becomes a composer?'
If a composer could state in words what being a composer means, he would no longer need to be a composer.
To make good films, you have to have a good relationship and good collaboration as composer-director, composer-editor, composer-production designer-actor because you're working with the actors on screen.
I'd been playing the piano since I was 6 and wanted to be a composer, but I also wanted to be an actor. I decided to just pursue both and see which won out.
I always wanted to be a spontaneous composer.
I'm not a script composer. I'm a film composer and my brain is excited by images and moving elements.
Every philharmonic orchestra merely interprets the composer. My goal was to create new music by that composer. In doing so, I wanted to find the painter's creative center and become familiar with it, so that I could see through his eyes how his paintings came about and, of course, see the new picture I was painting through his eyes - before I even painted it.
It is always interesting and sometimes even important to have intimate knowledge of a composer's life, but it is not essential in order to understand the composer's works.
Any composer who is gloriously conscious that he is a composer must believe that he receives his inspiration from a source higher than himself.
It's the vision of the composer that we have to determine, and not the absolute mathematical adherence of the score. In my experience, there have been occasions where I feel that a composer has not notated something as they meant to have it represented.
Any composer will not completely enjoy the process of creating a remix. Even if one adds their own elements, the song ultimately belongs to the original composer.
I am a passionate, committed composer, and the guy I used to write musicals with, once he was able to ditch me and get a better composer, actually won the Tony.
I'm glad I won it because when I grew up the Pulitzer was the award that every composer wanted and I was like that too.
I think that if I were required to spend the rest of my life on a desert island, and to listen to or play the music of any one composer during all that time, that composer would almost certainly be Bach.
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