Top 1200 Loud Music Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular Loud Music quotes.
Last updated on November 17, 2024.
It's funny, the power of music. I was watching 'Dracula,' the 1931 version with Bela Lugosi, and the only music you hear is at the very beginning of the credits. There's not one other piece of music; it's all silent. It's unbelievable, and it's very effective, too.
I need a hobby, and I don't want it to be basketball. I want it to be music. So to get away from music, I do other music.
I screwed up at a young age with my parents. They were very religious and they didn't really understand music. They didn't really listen to music. I went through a series of battles with them about why I loved music.
If we taught music the way we try to teach engineering, in an unbroken four year course, we could end up with all theory and no music. When we study music, we start to practice from the beginning, and we practice for the entire time.
Maybe one day music will just be music, and there won't be these categories; it'll just be different shades of music. — © Sam Hunt
Maybe one day music will just be music, and there won't be these categories; it'll just be different shades of music.
There are a lot of options when it comes between music and acting. For me, because I'm so passionate about my music career, you have to be extremely passionate when you have opportunities like films and real money actually coming to you compared to with music.
I like to listen to Congolese music because when I was a kid with my father, he took me to play some tournaments in the car and always put on this music. I always fell asleep with this music so it's good things that I remember.
I try to pick music for a diner that doesnt involve a lot of lyrics, so you're not paying attention to that. As long as it doesnt dominate the party, it should be more atmosphere music. When I'm by myself, I never play music.
It's difficult to differentiate between a story that's humorous and clever and one that actually makes people laugh out loud.
I figured, 'Why not go into entertainment?' I love entertaining people. I always loved being extra loud.
In the 1960s, people like Bob Dylan, his music and words were a threat to the society and mainstream of the time. It shook people alive, and directly and indirectly things changed. But, as I see it, the change is never through the music alone. It's also the circumstances around the music that will cause/create the effect. And sometimes it's just strictly accidental that a piece of music becomes a form of protest.
I mean, I wasn't the best student in school. It would be different if I were to pursue music while I was already in school and doing things for my parents to be proud of and music was a side thing. Being that I dropped everything to do music, they was not with it.
What am I afraid of as an artist? I guess I was scared before of just not being heard. But I'm too loud now.
I am not afraid of saying something and going and pursuing it. That's it. I see it in my mind. I say it out loud. I go and do it.
I feel greatly at fault in not having made a loud public protest about Belle Glade before this. — © Marjory Stoneman Douglas
I feel greatly at fault in not having made a loud public protest about Belle Glade before this.
Music copyright and licensing laws haven't kept up with technology or the times. The Music Modernization Act fixes that with a comprehensive set of reforms that will help musicians receive royalties they are owed while ensuring the public has access to that music.
People used to complain to me all the time, 'I can't even hear you sing because your clothes are so loud.
First thing every morning before you arise say out loud, 'I believe,' three times.
Saying you love something out loud with the wrong intonation in your face can damn you and destroy what you're working on.
I just wanted to do a music show, with the whole realm of music from Ella Fitzgerald to rock bands like Cream to Kenny Rogers. We had a lot of country, but we did every kind of music. The Monkees were on, and so was Johnny Cash.
However, I have a lot of greed. The types of music I want to show are on this side and on that side. Conclusively, if I'm able to make good music and people continue to look for my music, won't this kind of controversy get better... is my thought.
My character Preet in 'Fanaah' had a very distinctive appearance: loud make-up and dramatic clothes.
I want to continue to constantly put out great music, expand further and further with the live show and music that is attracting music fans from all over the place, not only for ravers or electronic heads.
I didn't get played on radio or TV for 3 years. They all told me the same thing: it was too urban. They don't see grime music as commercial music, but all music is commercial; it's how you make it. That's what I'm trying to say.
There are just so many people making music out there. I've always promoted the idea that everybody needs to make music. I think the more music there is in the world, the better, but it does make it highly competitive.
I think music is a big, big wide world, and I am voyager on this particular ship in this sea of wild music, and I'm gonna dive in and find as many fish as I can and catch them all. I love music.
We [with Cisco Adler] came back to the concept that our music, our lifestyle, and what we stood for was dope. So whoever the show brought to the music, they would stick. It was a way to bring people to the music, and I'm still doing that.
I don't like the idea that in music, clothes, taste or anything, we are limited to a certain style, because we need to maintain an identity, maybe between some subculture group. Hopefully, all those walls break down, and music is just music.
Call it whatever you want, whether it's hip-hop or cult music or pop music, but to me, it's all pretty disposable. I don't think that the music of Nikki Minaj or Justin Beiber is going to be played on the radio twenty-five years from now.
Gaslight Anthem's thing is its power. It's just like boom and explosions and loud, and play with everything you got.
If I don't already know a song's chord progression, I'll stop writing and try to figure it out. I can occasionally listen to unstructured, amelodic ambient music, but I prefer no music. I don't need silence - I can write just about anywhere - but music is a major distraction.
God told me, 'I gave you the music, Al. Sing the music I gave you - all the music.' So I did.
I have a little bit of PTSD when I hear a big bang or a loud noise or keys - I jump out of my skin.
Music, for me, is the most sacred of the arts. I say that because music communicates in a way that no other art form can. All great art has a spirit that we recognize and appreciate, but music goes directly to your heart.
I'm not a story; I'm a person, and my passion is music. And I want your passion to be my music - so, judge me on my music.
Let your inner queen's voice come through loud and clear. Be strong, be authentic, be you, and you'll do her proud.
Music is generally important to blind people, and most of the blind people that I have come into contact, through my parents, music is very special to them. Obviously, because it is more salient, you know? We might like going to the movies, and of course we like music too, but when the eyes don't work then the ears pick up slack. Music is all the sweeter at that point.
I'm in my fifties now. That's still a shock when I say it out loud, because I don't feel any different to when I was in my thirties.
I can do a really loud monkey call. I can put both my legs behind my back. And I can stick my fist in my mouth.
I do some solo, acoustic stuff, but I also like plugging in my electric guitar and playing loud with a band. — © James Bay
I do some solo, acoustic stuff, but I also like plugging in my electric guitar and playing loud with a band.
My character in 'Shame' is an outrageous person. Loud and uncompromising and I begged Steve McQueen to give me the job.
My singing voice has sort of an Ethel Merman-type quality: just, like, loud and strong and full.
Samson told Delilah loud and clear, keep your cotton picken fingers out of my hair.
I think the world is very much embracing this whole concept of musicians going out and playing their instruments and playing music for music as opposed to music that has something to do with some form of image or imagery.
When I started, DJs weren't in the media, electronic music wasn't in the sales charts and a DJ was the freak in the corner who provided the music while other people had fun. So to do it, you must have been a freak and a music lover.
Music is sunshine. Like sunshine, music is a powerful force that can instantly and almost chemically change your entire mood. Music gives us new energy and a stronger sense of purpose.
Congolese rumba was so huge in Africa that everybody was inspired by it. But my African roots brought me this music. In every African family, parties in Brussels, we used to listen to this kind of music. And salsa music as well.
I think the aggressive and loud way that I played in the championship game is kind of polarizing; you either love it or you hate it.
It is by vivacity and wit that man shines in company; but trite jokes and loud laughter reduce him to a buffoon.
The only place where any artist feels liberated is doing independent music. I have had great experience making music for The Dewarists and Coke Studio. No actor, producer or label is telling me what to do with my music. I'm the boss. It is my life, my expression.
It is completely usual for me to get up in the morning, take a look around, and laugh out loud. — © Barbara Kingsolver
It is completely usual for me to get up in the morning, take a look around, and laugh out loud.
I was completely shocked - two Grammy nominations. I've said it out loud to myself about 100 times.
I want to travel around the country and make my living playing music. I also try to behave in a way that I would appreciate as a music fan. That's how we conduct ourselves, be it in writing music or playing it live.
Music, music, music. It doesn't get much better than that! It pretty much consumes my life.
Nothing cuts deeper than when another person says exactly what you're afraid to say out loud.
One thing about skating that I don't think people focus on enough is the music factor. The music is a huge component of figure skating. It can dictate not only the choreography but the emotion. If it's not the right music it can ruin a performance.
And you should hear the music. Incredible, amazing music, like nothing you've ever heard, music that almost takes your head off, you know? That makes you want to scream and jump up and down and break stuff and cry.
Laughing, if loud, ends with a deep sigh; and all pleasures have a sting in the tail, though they carry beauty in the face.
I feel a vocabulary in my music that is coming from popular music. Popular music is like the mother of all languages.
I was typecast for a long time. A lot of people thought all Divine could do was play a loud, beefy blonde.
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