Somehow you'll escape
all that waiting and staying.
You'll find the bright places
where Boom Bands are playing.
I started playing in punk-rock bands and touring when I was 15, so I missed high school.
I guess a lot of bands play around until they come up with something they like.
The average life spans of many bands are not that long, up to five years if they are lucky.
I got introduced to Western music and it inspired me. One of my favourite bands is Pink Floyd.
When we're on tour, probably we don't go 24 hours without someone asking us where we came up with the name They Might Be Giants. Which, on one level, seems like a completely legitimate question. If I think of other bands, like The Beatles, it would explain to me that John Lennon had a proclivity for slightly cheap puns. But I'm not sure how much insight that would give me into what's actually good about The Beatles' music.
I think there was a real lane built for indie bands during the time when Chairlift came up.
I feel like I'm waving the flag for musicianship, trying to bring back bands that can play.
I have had success throughout the years. Some of the hard rock bands today don't have the history that I have.
Tribute bands have kind of taken over the market, and I don't want to come across as being that.
I never spend money on hair bands. I just go to a ribbon-trimming store.
Nature has concatenated our fortunes and affections together with indissoluble bands of mutual sympathy.
After all, in today's music scene every band seems to steal from other bands.
I feel that bands can do whatever they want, after all, they own themselves and the art/music they create.
I don't think there's anything remotely "new" or "experimental" about any modern metal bands.
When I got into high school, clarinet was not really in fashion. Everybody had electric bands.
I think a lot of bands have hit songs that don't get the attention that they ever are going to deserve.
So many bands write about the same s - . It gets real boring after a while.
A lot of big labels will just sign bands like a write off.
Crowdfunding as an idea itself isn't new - bands have been doing it since the dawn of time.
So many bands are like, 'I'm real because I'm dirty.' If you have money for guitars, you can afford soap.
If the weather is sunny, it is good; if the weather is rainy, it is good; if it is foggy, it is good; if it is stormy, it is good; if it is damn cold, it is good; if it is damn hot, it is good! With a positive attitude of mind, all becomes good!
I love jam bands, but I still like a three-and-a-half-minute rock song.
On Friendster, if you were a band and you made a profile, they would delete it. They didn't want bands on their site.
Growing up, just singing in bands, I didn't have the same kind of voice as everyone else.
Good design is innovative
2. Good design makes a product useful
3. Good design is aesthetic
4. Good design makes a product understandable
5. Good design is unobtrusive
6. Good design is honest
7. Good design is long-lasting
8. Good design is thorough, down to the last detail
9. Good design is environmentally friendly
10. Good design is as little design as possible
I just listen to quite random songs; I don't like really particular artists or bands.
There are a lot of bands and performers whose careers are permanently derailed by spectacularly bad management.
Slayer is one of my favorite bands of all time, and to be on a tour with them is absolutely a dream come true.
I'm lucky to have had the opportunity to perform with bands that have influenced me as a musician over the years.
Most bands people have side projects and it's not considered a death threat as it was say, with The Beatles.
I think K-pop bands rock, and their success raises my spirit to perform better on stage.
I'm just worn down and weary of bands whose lyrics are cryptic and self-referential.
I had glow in the dark bands made up and I've given away a ton of them.
I judge people based solely on the quality of bands on the black concert t-shirts they wear.
I played in a couple of really crummy bands, including one in the dorm I was in at MIT, for a year or two.
With the Internet, bands can come and go every five minutes and the music looks disposable.
You have to go away to come back. That's just normal. That's with bands, actors, comedians, everything.
I think a lot of bands are influenced by religious symbolism and not even necessarily Christianity or Catholicism.
As you grow, it feels hopelessly corporate but it really is worth putting in place these compensation bands.
I think we appreciate the musicianship we're surrounded with. Too many bands - it's an ego trip for the leader.
I've been in many bands and every time I try to be a character that's not me it has failed miserably.
I believe that the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin are two of the greatest rock bands ever!
My father was always in bands. He played drums and could sing. And my grandfather was a band leader.
We've been gone five years and the best they could come up with was boy bands?
Both my uncles were in bands, my grandpa was a comedian who wore clown makeup on stage.
We have an electronic vein we have tapped and applied it to a rock setting like tons of bands out there.
Bands work in a way where everyone, at some point, has to have a similar idea of how you do things.
You never know what's next for me. I might go into making one of them rock bands.
I don't worry about new young bands. The bounty of life is infinite and so is music and so are opportunities.
Most of the bands that come out of L.A. now have singers that all sound like Daffy Duck.
The south is very focused on family... the musical heritage of Muscle Shoals especially and the bands from the region.
A government held together by the bands of reason only, requires much compromise of opinion.
As you'll never hear the thing again, my boy, why not throw in a couple of brass bands?
So I've had lots of different bands over the years who have stayed with me for certain tours.
I'm not ashamed to say that I really loved some of the hair metal bands of the '80s.
I described the pyramid we'd found and waited for him to jump on the bandwagon. Unfortunately he's afraid of wagons. And bands.
Nirvana was a band that led you somewhere, as opposed to all the grunge bands that began and ended with themselves.
I think social media is so important; the young bands have certainly embraced that and used that to their advantage.
A lot of bands break through with their third record: the White Stripes, the Clash, the Replacements.
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