A Quote by Mitch Lucker

The danger in it. Being a frontman in a band, you get addicted to adrenaline rushes. — © Mitch Lucker
The danger in it. Being a frontman in a band, you get addicted to adrenaline rushes.
When you're in the military, especially if you serve, you leave in this heightened world of having adrenaline course through you, all the time. You get addicted to that because adrenaline is essentially a drug.
I'm an adrenaline junkie, I won't deny it. I'm not addicted to anything in life, except adrenaline.
When I get home from touring, I need to find something to match that so I don't get my adrenaline withdrawals. Being exposed to every element of danger while you're sitting on a motor - that, to me, is freedom.
I can see how a person could get addicted to the adrenaline of moviemaking.
For a frontman of a band, good hair is a requisite.
We are still a people in danger. And yet I urge us not to get addicted to it.
Whenever I set out in a new direction, whether it's with a new band or being a frontman or writing a comic book or entering into movie scoring or anything like that, I wouldn’t say that I do it fearlessly...
I've always been addicted to adrenaline.
So, we went from being an Athens band to being a Georgia band to being a Southern band to being an American band from the East Coast to being an American band and now we're kind of an international phenomenon.
You wouldn't be a complete band without a slightly cocky frontman, would you?
I think being a frontman is the greatest job and I get to do this every day.
I went through a period when I was addicted to gambling. It was a compulsion that I struggled to get to grips with. By 1990, it was in danger of ruining my life.
There's a weird loneliness that comes with being a comedian, especially standup. Even with improvisers, I think there are certain moments of truth where you feel really, really connected to audiences, and that's when you're on stage. I think there's definitely something inside the personality of a person who wants to be a comedian that's looking to connect at all times. That's where the adrenaline rushes in their lives come from.
I'm addicted to the adrenaline of performing, and I think when you're used to having that high, you look for it in other things.
I love people. I love being in a band. I love making music. I had to figure out that was way more important than being addicted.
I suppose in some ways that's why my collaborations worked out, because I would go in the studio with such enthusiasm and it would never be a chore for me. I was never itching for the process to be done so we could get out live. It's a different matter for me now. Now I've noticed that I actually have one eye or one ear on how I'm going to do it on stage. And maybe that's because I'm the frontman in the group; I do believe that any good frontman should be impatient in the studio to get out.
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