As a composer, I know that all sorts of sounds I hear are making their way into my brain and soul and later sneak into my music.
I came from a very strict background, and didn't hear any Jamaican music when I was growing up.
Music is always occurring. It is just a matter of marketing, attention, and many other factors, that determines whether people will hear these songs or not.
When you make music, you're in really direct contact with your fans out there, so you hear all kinds of stories.
I don't get to listen to music for fun very often; a lot of what I'm hearing is for work and isn't released yet.
I don't need anybody to market or promote me. If people don't want to hear this music, then it's not for them. You cannot please everybody.
I have terrible hearing trouble. I have unwittingly helped to invent and refine a type of music that makes its principal proponents deaf.
Some of us get a feeling when we hear music and we feel music, and you want to figure out how to continue to feel that.
How about that? You can hear NFL Films music on everything from 'SpongeBob SquarePants' to 'Deep Throat.'
To come to a concert and hear a lot of songs from a female perspective should not make men say, 'Oh well, that's for women'.
I hear my friends and my mom tell me I'm special, but honestly, I still don't get it.
Kyouichi Motobuchi: SHUT UP! I can't hear the video.
There is something very utopian about what I do. But utopia is nothing more than a truth that the world is not yet ready to hear.
I think the fans really wanna hear the songs the way they sound on the record.
I hear entire symphonies, oratorios, in my head, but I can't write a note.
In the dark you hear movement—a squeak, a hiding. The heart opens, closes, opens.
I'd rather hear an ugly truth, rather than an obscure lie.
What you see is what you get. What you hear is who I am.
I think as a kid I always liked to listen to people. I loved hearing stories.
People are usually surprised to hear this, but I don't really read children's books.
And as long as people want to hear me sing, I don't know why I'd retire.