Top 1200 Electronic Music Quotes & Sayings - Page 3

Explore popular Electronic Music quotes.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Oddly, I think that a lot of the haters of EDM and DJs are actually within the world of electronic music.
I've been making some more electronic music, which I really enjoy doing.
I personally love electronic music specifically because it has the rhythm, the kick, the thump - it has energy. — © Bakermat
I personally love electronic music specifically because it has the rhythm, the kick, the thump - it has energy.
With electronic music, you are not confined to the acoustics of a concert-hall, and that inspired me to bring my performances outdoors.
I only discovered electronic music as a teenager and I still love the Prodigy and Massive Attack.
I first was introduced to really, I guess, underground electronic music when I was in middle school.
When I started working on electronic music, that was after the rave period. I haven't even seen that part of it that much.
A lot of electronic music out there feels cold. I want to incorporate a human element.
The condition of matter I have dignified by the term Electronic, THE ELECTRONIC STATE. What do you think of that? Am I not a bold man, ignorant as I am, to coin words?
If anything I think we connect to what our parents were listening to when they were our age. I'm listening to a lot of classical and electronic music, like Aphex Twin, non-vocal music.
Music is composed on computers and other electronic equipment; producers don't want to spend money on orchestra.
Electronic music has existed since the '70s, and it's almost comical how many subgenres of it there are.
Electronic music is really weird right, because it is bleeding into the mainstream, but, at the same time, it's fashion. — © Nigel Godrich
Electronic music is really weird right, because it is bleeding into the mainstream, but, at the same time, it's fashion.
Independence has been key to the success and sustained growth of electronic music over the past 25 years.
I can't say that electronic gear is restrictive. I think it is a challenge to play with electronic gear, and I regularly [perform] concerts with guys who are processing sound.
I don't appreciate avant-garde, electronic music. It makes me feel quite ill.
I think the rise of electronic music as a main stage concept has been a long time coming.
Puerto Rico got too futuristic with the electronic reggaeton. It lost the essence of the reggae music.
Our daily life is filled with electronic pianos, ring tones, the disembodied voice giving you your bank balance over the telephone. Even silence can be electronic, courtesy of sound-canceling headphones.
I'd call what I do pop music, but it's folky and electronic and it doesn't really sound like much else.
Rave music sounds like an electronic disco version of '30s Universal monster movies.
There's definitely a push and a pull to 'legitimize' electronic music live by playing the same way that a band would play.
I've been making electronic music since I was 12. I was making music as soon as I knew how to make sounds on a piano. My parents had a baby grand, and the piano is still my favorite instrument. I look at it as a songwriting machine.
I've always had a deep passion for a lot of early electronic and sampled music.
I'm definitely not a laptop/midi/abelton guy. But there is a lot of music I like. I really like Bach organ music. I really like Chopin piano music. I really like Wendy Carlo's electronic music. I really like Miles Davis and John Mclaughlin jazz style. So I'm not only an old-school rocker, but I have to admit that I'm going to be listening to The Doors, Rolling Stones, Iggy Pop, David Bowie and Bob Dylan many times a week.
At the end of the '90s and into 2000, electronic music was still an underground phenomenon, especially in America.
I've been really excited about some new cutting edge electronic music and technology.
When I sit behind that electronic drum, it dominates me; there is no innovation in composing music like that.
The electronic music world is such a tight-knit community. We're all hanging out at different festivals and such.
In the process of making nanomaterials, we learned that with the electronic density of states, the phonon electronic properties and everything change at the nano-level. So the thermoelectric properties would also be changed.
We're huge fans of Kylie Minogue, Grimes, and artists who are doing more electronic music.
It's much easier to have a diversified career as an electronic musician than it is as a drummer. Nothing against drummers. If you're a drummer, you just wait around for people to ask you to play drums. But if you have your own studio and can make music, you have the ability to approach music a lot differently.
When I'm skiing, I listen to electronic music. It's repetitive and let's me get into a groove and crank out the miles.
The future of commerce is going to be all electronic. The gold standard was a fine idea, but electronic changes of funds and credits will be the future.
The way Electronic Dance Music [EDM] is manipulated and exported to the world is a very strong, and "total" concept. But it's not that interesting artistically. EDM is seen by some media as a kickstarter for kids who have no idea how deep dance music can go.
There's no separation between electronic music and acoustic music. It's all one thing. Each song has its own heartbeat. Each song has its own soul.
It's good to listen to electronic music when you're stressed out because you will feel a release afterwards.
Electronic music is innately tied to the technology used to create it - as the tools evolve, so will the art. — © Richie Hawtin
Electronic music is innately tied to the technology used to create it - as the tools evolve, so will the art.
Analog, electronic, whatever it happens to be, I simply love and adore literally every aspect of making music.
In electronic music, staying behind your laptop for two hours is not too exciting to watch.
I started with soul music and icons like Aretha Franklin and Etta James and then moved to R&B and artists such as Erykah Badu and Lauryn Hill. Electronic music came later on, when I was in high school and I was really influenced by artists like Skrillex and Major Lazer.
The concept and vision of 'Electronic Nature' is to give my fans a fully immersive sensory experience of music, visuals and more.
What playing solo has reminded me is how much I love electronic music and how much I love dance music. I'd like to move towards something more hypnotic and rhythmic rather than song-based.
There's a confusion sometimes with the laptop being the current tools and where electronic music initially comes from.
People are approaching electronic levels in music; although not all of it happens to tickle my fancy.
It's an honor for me to close out Mysteryland. In American music history this is hallowed ground. I think electronic music has a lot in common with the spirit of rock and roll and what Woodstock had going on at the time. We are kind of the new kids on the block and this music isn't accepted by everyone so we are still kind of getting into pop culture and I think its appropriate that this festival is here and kicking down the door.
I am definitely pro-European, even pro-global, and house music and electronic music has developed a network all over the world, between record shops in Berlin, Tokyo, London, Chicago, Minneapolis and L.A. That's really what I feel part of, rather than being French.
I do feel like there's a level of ridiculousness going on in electronic music... It's getting borderline absurd out there. — © Kaskade
I do feel like there's a level of ridiculousness going on in electronic music... It's getting borderline absurd out there.
There's many different genres, and when you see R&B and pop and house, as well as electronic, come together, that's the reality of what music is.
I was a big fan of Middle Eastern elements of music and experimental electronic and tribal sounds.
My big problem is that I don't promote my electronic music very much because it makes my 'normal' fans angry!
In my teenage years I was as addicted to great pop as I was to free jazz, electronic music, and hardcore blues.
I think that electronic music mirrors the complexity of "information landscapes." You carry the terrain in your mind.
I'd love to do a live album, like a little bit old school but still progressive, influenced maybe by more electronic music. I like everything, but I don't know anything about music. So it comes in to a lot of different ingredients. I love hip hop.
I think that the audience intuitively understands the idea of sampling and remixing stories. That's why electronic music is global.
People are approaching electronic levels in music; although not all of it happens to tickle my fancy
It's good to see that America has a hub for electronic music in Vegas, like Europe has with Ibiza.
I combine aspects of many styles of music and create my own musical forms by way of electronic instruments.
For me, electronic music is like cooking: it's a sensual organic activity where you can mix ingredients.
I come from a world of hip-hop, but I love all types of music, and that's what Revolt will reflect. It will be home to electronic dance music, pop, hip-hop.
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