I see no reason for recording the obvious.
I have been recording for five decades now.
My goal was never to sell many records.
Collecting records is, for many, beyond a hobby.
Every single record I have is a fossil.
History is a record of human nature in action.
Nowadays people sell millions of records that can't sing.
I want to make 20, 30, 50 studio records.
I made a record album in 1960 and it exploded, and I got all these offers for TV.
I'm a results-oriented person and my Senate record shows that.
Legends are material to be moulded, and not facts to be recorded.
We didn't sell a lot of records, but somehow we left an impression.
We do do such a variety, especially if you consider all five records.
It's hard sometimes to capture magic when it comes to live records.
There's something very reassuring... about the written record.
I never excluded any genre on my first record.
It was all recorded and mixed and there's more continuity in it more direction.
I record all night and sleep all day.
I don't have to be working on an album to record a song.
I applaud the effort it takes to put a record together.
I've been there and done all that, sold millions of records, and that doesn't bring you peace.