Top 1200 Studio 54 Quotes & Sayings - Page 14

Explore popular Studio 54 quotes.
Last updated on December 12, 2024.
I want my paintings to look like what's going on outside my window rather than what's inside my studio.
Human warmth is perhaps the most lacking in a composer who lives his life in a recording studio.
The painter locks himself out of his own studio. And then has to break in like a thief. — © Jackson Pollock
The painter locks himself out of his own studio. And then has to break in like a thief.
While I was with Procol Harum, the only time I'd see my guitar was either when I walked onstage or in the studio.
I got out of high school, bought a recording studio and started operating it as an engineer and a producer.
I have just returned from the dubbing studio where I spoke into a microphone as Severus Snape for absolutely the last time.
Some of the earlier stuff I did in studio with producers was very pop-directed, which I was uncomfortable with.
See what I do is I book a studio that's closed down and I go by myself. No one's in there, literally just me and the engineer.
When I talk about football from a studio standpoint, I try to cut through the minutia and get to the point.
We work hard when we're in the studio, but then when we take our breaks, we walk outside and look around.
The problem with doing a schlocky or big budget studio film is that it wouldn't actually be fun for me. It wouldn't be exciting.
I spent a long time on a big studio sitcom, 'Baddiel's Syndrome,' for Sky, and got no audience.
I laughed from the time I arrived at the studio until I left at night. I was almost ashamed to take a paycheck. — © Patsy Kelly
I laughed from the time I arrived at the studio until I left at night. I was almost ashamed to take a paycheck.
Somehow, magically, I've become an electronic musician, and I have a recording studio that looks like the bridge of the Enterprise.
You can build radiant health, success and happiness by the thoughts you think in the hidden studio of your mind.
Many of my friends were there at Motown. The studio was only a few blocks from where my dad's home was, where we lived.
I became interested in photography when I was sharing a studio with Walker Evans, and found my own sketching was inadequate.
I beat myself up in the studio because I know that a lot of people are expecting me to fail.
I started out with the guitar and was a studio musician back in the 50s, and then got shot in my finger.
The first time I tried to sing along with my guitar, everybody in the studio booed. They all said it wouldn't work.
Not taking criticism of your writing personally is an enormous step towards surviving the studio system.
On our studio album 'Fly From Here' in 2011, we spent a year and a half promoting that around the world.
I spend so much time in my studio, which can be very dark, so it can begin to feel as if I'm a mole underground.
For a living I write stuff that I know is gonna sell to a studio and make a lot of money at the multiplex.
One of the factors that still keeps me in the studio is that every so often I have to more or less start all over.
I used to go to work and take heroin in the studio and then stop when I came home.
I love the studio audience. That's where I feel the most at home. You know right away if you're being funny or not.
I must say, I've been in the studio with Jay Z, dog... I thought the freestyle thing was a myth. But, bro!
I'm never tired of going to the studio. I enjoy recording and documenting everything and trying new things.
Recording 'Tusk' was quite absurd. The studio contract rider for refreshments was like a telephone directory.
Imagine the first time you are about to rap in a studio and you find yourself in a booth with Redman and KRS!
I can make everything I do come from my laptop. Even when I go to a big studio, all I do is to plug in my laptops. That's they way I do it.
It's a different thing when you go into a studio and you record with the intent of going somewhere and you're marketing yourself for that direction.
I definitely like making music in the studio, but I never had it out to make a CD specifically.
I don't know, whenever someone was like, 'Yeah, I'm going to the studio,' I just went with them. And I started recording.
No, I don't spend a lot of time in the studio, man. I truly don't. I'll be in there when I have to. I hate the containment, I can't stand the schedule crap.
It used to be you would need a couple grand to make a record at a studio. Now, you can do it on freaking GarageBand.
From the end of 2015 to the start of 2016, I was always at the studio with Mustard, just figuring out a sound. — © Ella Mai
From the end of 2015 to the start of 2016, I was always at the studio with Mustard, just figuring out a sound.
The Buggles was much more a studio environment idea, which we never actually took on the road.
I like performing live more than anything. I get a little bit afraid in the studio.
I'm not going to sit around and wait for some old studio executive to decide my career path.
I'm in the studio for hours in that tiny little box, and really, the performing part is what I'm most excited about.
I just like to do covers, every once in a while. If someone pays me to go into the studio, I'll do it.
I think if you went to a studio and pitched the first 'Insidious,' it never would have gotten made because it was so offbeat.
I work out of my home studio that I built in this warehouse in Philadelphia. I've kind of curated it for my needs and my sound.
Every time before I go into the studio, I say a prayer, and I really ask God for inspiration.
When Quavo was out doing sports, I was in the studio, what we call the bando, making music, going hard.
I really feel there's no limitation on what this band can do in the studio or on the stage. That's an empowering feeling - that we can bring a song to life. — © Ben Harper
I really feel there's no limitation on what this band can do in the studio or on the stage. That's an empowering feeling - that we can bring a song to life.
I have never had a studio, and I do not understand shutting oneself up in a room. To draw, yes; to paint, no.
I get the feeling that sometimes the ideas work very well when you're doing them in the studio alone.
At the age of 15, in Navi Mumbai I had my own dance studio and 700 students were there.
Now it really is, believe it or not, 90% of the films are green lit, not by the studio heads, but by the marketing department.
Usually I go to the studio to write lyrics and compose music. I try to be a dad as much as possible at home.
It's funny, there aren't too many musicians that also moonlight as studio engineers. There's a few - the really brilliant ones.
Every musician knows your studio is like - it's a bubble for you. It's a personal space. This is where I work, where I create.
If you think of movie studio executives, say, as society, then I root for the independent producers.
I sing all the time but I'd never gotten what it felt like to be in the recording studio, so it was definitely a learning process.
You go into any recording studio in the world, and you see candles, lights, and that Apple light from a Mac.
I don't get the sense of doing anything of national importance. I travel to the studio, work and go home.
I've literally pitched to every studio and network trying to get directing work. It's really hard.
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