A Quote by Scott Weiland

When I was around nine years old, I was a fan of Shaun Cassidy's first album. — © Scott Weiland
When I was around nine years old, I was a fan of Shaun Cassidy's first album.
I didn't want to be the typical teen idol. I didn't want to be Leif Garrett. I didn't want to be Shaun Cassidy, David Cassidy or Parker Stevenson. I wanted to do my own thing.
I don't want what Shaun Cassidy gets. I am a serious actress.
My fan base is really, really young. They're the youngest demographic that you can track on YouTube: 13- to 17-year-old females. But the fan mail that I get in my P.O. box, they're all from moms and from kids who are two years old, three years old, four years old.
I had been a wrestling fan since I was nine years old.
I was a singer professionally when I was four years old, and I did not really begin to play any instrument - the first one, of course, was drums - till I was about nine years old.
One thing they don't tell you about growing old - you don't feel old, you just feel like yourself. And it's true. I don't feel eighty-nine years old. I simply am eighty-nine years old.
When I got the 'Blue Album,' I was 11 years old, 10 years old, and then I convinced my parents to go and get my first drum kit, which was, like, 600 bucks.
I remember when I made my first album, I was 32 or 33 years old and I thought I was way too old then.
My debut album is like a collection of work over the past nine or ten years that I've been writing since I was 18-years-old, and when you've had that long writing music you get to select the music that has worked really well.
I was nine-years-old when I first put on skates.
I won my first medal when I was nine years old. It was at the Boston Open.
I emigrated to the U.S. on February 3, 1983, when I was 19 years old. I joined Steeler right away and recorded the album the following month. I'd been playing in bands in Sweden since the age of 11, but 'Steeler' was my first album.
My first record - it was 1991. I was 16 years old. My first album came out when I was 20. So, I've been here that long and I still have the passion to do it.
I think I was about nine years old when I got my first job.
It was in the year 1820, when I was nearly nine years old, that I first went to a regular school.
This is going to make me sound 100 years old, but I really loved David Cassidy in 'The Partridge Family.'
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