A Quote by Sandeep Singh

I don't think of myself as a lesser player. — © Sandeep Singh
I don't think of myself as a lesser player.
I never look at myself as a black player. I think of myself as a hockey player that wants to be the best player in the league.
It's funny to find there are still people around who think if a musician has schooling, it automatically makes him a lesser jazz player. But you don't learn jazz in school.
I showed myself a lesser version of myself that night, and I’m glad I learned from it.
My dad was a steelworker but I had the opportunity to become a player. A very average player but a player all the same. But I worked my socks off to make something of myself.
I'm a guitar player. Actually, I think of myself as a songwriter/rhythm-guitar player.
I see myself as a Premier League player. If I see myself as a Championship player, that's not good enough. You have to aim higher and if you come just short then it's not too bad.
Sure, sometimes guys pass you up in salary, and maybe it's a lesser player, but it's all based on what a team has as far as value in that person.
I had done the sitcom thing to lesser and lesser degrees of success.
As you grow older, there are lesser and lesser roles for you in the movies, while in dance the field opens up as you mature.
The supreme rulers are hardly known by their subjects. The lesser are loved and praised. The even lesser are feared. The least are despised.
Yeah, I consider myself an unpredictable player. A player that's flashy here and there and then is maybe conservative here and there and I think when it comes to dressing, it's me figuring out that balance of when to be flashy or when to be super simple with maybe flashy shoes.
Pushing myself against my own will really, because some of this stuff is hard. I don't consider myself to be a great guitar player, so pushing myself as a guitar player or pushing myself as a singer, as a performer, and just riding that fine line between being so hard on yourself that it's counter-productive and being so hard on yourself that nothing is ever good enough is what drives me.
I think of myself as a complete player.
The lesser the friends, the lesser the chances of betrayal.
I like to think of myself as a creative player.
On "Tonight" I think I was torn dreadfully between writing what I wanted to write, but keeping it in a style that would follow up what I had just done. That's where I feel I was untrue to myself as an artist . . . that album and, to a lesser extent, "Never Let Me Down."
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