Top 1200 Records Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular Records quotes.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
Hurricane Katrina reiterated the need for [access to] medical records, ... ... But there's going to be a lot more needed than $4 million.
People look at track records now, and voters as stakeholders want ease of living and development, which is my aim.
A lot of photography is making records of people, as objects, friends. It's like organizing a wardrobe - in terms of size etc. — © Francesca Woodman
A lot of photography is making records of people, as objects, friends. It's like organizing a wardrobe - in terms of size etc.
I do not want our society to be one where the government feels free to check your private phone records anytime it pleases.
When you look at the teachings of the Bible, it's pretty dark with Revelations, the Holy Ghost and everything, so hence the darkness upon me on my records.
It would be great to do a rock opera, but using more low-fi technology. I love shitty-sounding records.
I'm not a human interest story, man. I'm just a musician trying to make some small records and be happy, be peaceful.
We've made a lot of party music; we're definitely not Thom Yorke. But there's also depth to our records; we get emotional.
If I stopped making records or performing, I'd probably still be famous for a while being me. But I'd rather have something to show for myself.
In 20 years I had sold more records for RCA than any artist except Elvis Presley.
If you listen to a lot of old funk records, the drums are really small. But you don't perceive it like that because the groove is so heavy.
DJ culture always made us aware that the best records were going to come from the small shops
Perhaps the number of new hits is not being noted the way it was done in the era of records or cassettes with the emergence of Internet. — © Jeet Gannguli
Perhaps the number of new hits is not being noted the way it was done in the era of records or cassettes with the emergence of Internet.
By the numbers, by all the official records, here at the confluence of history, of racism, of poverty, and economic power, this is what our lives are worth: nothing.
My personal favorite records might have to be "Keep It Rollin" and "360" featuring Meek Mill...oh and the Intro Is Murder!
Computerized medical records will enable statistical analysis to be used to determine which treatments are most effective.
I don't think Marquee Moon was so good, y'know? Just another record. First records everybody likes a lot.
It's casual Friday, which means that at the White House, they're casually going through everybody's phone calls and records.
There are many things about living the gospel of Jesus Christ that cannot be measured by that which is counted or charted in records of attendance.
When I started recording, I thought I'd be able to do all kinds of records: jazz, country, dance - and I've always wanted to do a gospel album.
Pessimism and optimism are slammed up against each other in my records, the tension between them is where it's all at, it's what lights the fire.
Anybody that forms a group, writes songs and releases records and says they don't care if people like them are complete liars.
A poem records emotions and moods that lie beyond normal language, that can only be patched together and hinted at metaphorically.
I'm lyric conscious. I like to tell stories, give advice. Instead of writing a 'Dear Abby' column, I do it on records.
What changed our lives forever was when Malcolm had the idea to sell rock 'n roll records to trendy customers.
I grew up in an era where the record companies just sold records to everybody, and the whole family bought songs.
That moment when Kanye West secretly records your phone call, then Kim [Kardashian] posts it on the internet.
No one really gets rich doing this. A couple people do, Black Sabbath does. We don't sell any records anymore.
I never bothered about keeping track.Every now and then someone records one of my songs, and I get credit for it.
I get given loads of rubbish. So, I have two Alanis Morissette records which I hide when anyone with taste calls around.
We never could have foreseen the success of 'Babel.' It's not like banjo records were soaring up the charts, you know.
They were recorded without processed cheese. Listen to old '50s records. The style may be dated, but the recording isn't.
But we used to go to flea markets and things, and look for old 78 records that had silly song titles.
I never think about records. I focus on my race and try to get onto the podium consistently. It's hard enough to do that.
I never thought I'd be doing records a year after I started - I had no idea it would last as long as it did.
Some people speak of the Akashic Records as if they were on an IBM mainframe that's out there somewhere near the Restaurant at the End of the Universe.
When I was a child, on Sunday mornings the family would assemble around the blue-leather-covered gramophone to listen to records.
I cant immediately get all this coverage when my record comes out. The way I sell gold and platinum records is by being on the road. — © TobyMac
I cant immediately get all this coverage when my record comes out. The way I sell gold and platinum records is by being on the road.
Because my mother was in love with Bobby Darin, I grew up with his records playing in our house all the time.
I've been with Def Jam Records for five years and they gave me my first recording contract so for that I'm forever grateful.
I think I'm going to be making country records for as long as I can see into the future. It's much more down-home and real.
Ugster vinyl pumps, Partridge Family records, plastic daisy jewelry, old postcards. . . . It's a magpie Christmas market.
As a band, we always took a really long time to make records, so unfortunately, we got into that habit of, like, 'We'll work on it tomorrow.'
I was thinking of my father's family. I can find their graves, but not that much about them. They didn't do anything notable enough to be in the records of newspapers.
I feel like when the songwriting slows, I'd love to help others with their records. If it's something I really believe in, it's worth the effort.
Rap records don't make you feel good no more. Six months after release, it can't come back as a classic.
I have so much gratitude that I get to do this for a living and that I actually have fans who come to the shows and buy the records and support me online.
When I make records I have full control of everything and I know how it sounds before it comes out, with films it's outta my hands. — © Ice T
When I make records I have full control of everything and I know how it sounds before it comes out, with films it's outta my hands.
Castle Face Records, run by The Oh Sees main man, Johnny Dwyer is always worth checking in with.
Really, throughout my career, what I've done is taken teams with bad records and with every situation I've made them better.
The bonds you make with those records when you're 14, 15 and 16, they'll never be broken, and nothing will ever be as strong as that.
Nothing's handed to you on a silver platter. Everything takes work, no matter how many records you put out.
I love to play the songs that got me to where I am. I like to take a little bit from all of my records and mix it up.
Record companies are not necessarily interested in you realizing your artistic dream. The bottom line is that they got to sell records.
In the '80s, the way radio was programmed, if you didn't have a hit record you weren't going to be able to make any more records. That was it, period.
If people are so obsessed with Freddie that they can't bear to see Queen without him, they should stay home and listen to the records.
I struggled more with my identity. Let's be honest - early on in my first records, I didn't have the power to tell David Foster or other producers what to do.
Singing is something that I have done all my life, but what I did on my first two records was to hide the vocals. They're there to thicken the web of the cello.
Basically, we've learned to delegate. We just grew tired of becoming too psychotic and straining to make the records ourselves.
I have been an XL fan of Devo since I was in high school in the 1970s. Their records only sound better with time.
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