I don't profess to have music as my big wheel and there are a number of other things as important to me apart from music. Theatre and mime, for instance.
To me, all writing is like music. And especially dialogue. I studied music in college; that is what I wanted to be, a composer. Acting got me sidetracked.
Soul music as we've always known it hasn't changed. There are different players now with different attitudes, but there is nothing new being done musically.
I think there are people who really always have and always will care about the quality of music in general, about the sound of the music, things like that.
I don't generally listen to music while working, but sometimes music can help me get past minor writer's block.
When rock came along the lyrics and melodies became less important and it bothered me to think that perhaps they might not regain the value they have to music - they are music.
Any club is important. All Latin music movements are born in clubs. There is no better research than going to a club. If your music works, it will bounce up.
I'll never quit playing country music, or at least acknowledging it, always, as the cornerstone of what I am.
Books are acts of composition: you compose them. You make music: the music is called fiction.
I'd call what I do pop music, but it's folky and electronic and it doesn't really sound like much else.
Perhaps many of the perplexing problems of the new music could be put into a new light if we were to reintroduce the ancient idea of music being a reflection of nature.
Unfortunately or fortunately, in order to become acquainted with the idiom of country or rock music, it is necessary to occasionally play in a bar. Bars are a rehearsal place.
My favorite music is never the music that anyone else likes, and other people's favorite songs are always my least favorite.
I'm very fond of classical music, especially Mozart. I find it relaxes me and helps me concentrate.
I began composing works which were imitative of the music I was being told about. I was also very interested in translating the music into visual terms.
At a certain point, I became a kind of musician that has tunnel vision about jazz. I only listened to jazz and classical music.
I don't know if it's a sign of all the chaos that is happening out there or not, but I've lately craved the structure and order of classical music, the balance and symmetry.
The scarcity of the music not only makes the music itself enjoyable but it also gives the collector a strange sense of superiority.
I'm a big fan of piano-based rock music like Elton John, Ben Folds, and even Queen.
I honestly don't listen to a lot of music - I spend so much time working at my own music.
For a long time I have compared cinema to music, I think cinema has a lot to do with the rhythm of music.