You know, Rolling Stones songs all sound kind of the same.
We would play, then they would play a set, then we would jam on the last song.
That jam was so much fun that by the end of the tour, we just jammed on all of the songs.
Sharing the stage while singing my songs was a bit of a daunting prospect.
Miles Davis is one who writes songs when he plays.
I don't know how other bands play the same songs every night.
I think with any songwriter the first 1,000 songs are always terrible.
My songs were always about the tone of voice rather than the words.
My favorite song depends on the day, what I'm going through, what I'm feeling.
Generally my songs are just some riffs slung together as an excuse for a guitar solo.
This is not a rock opera. This is not Tommy. I can write songs that emote, and that's it.
I'm a method actress in my songs, which is why it's hard to sing them.
I have writing songs on my own for about six years.
Conservatives must avoid the siren song of schism, or all is lost.
I didn't write those songs, but I can relate to every one of them... I have.
I just try to get inside the song and imagine what comes next.
A song just doesn't come on. I've always had to tease it out, squeeze it out.
It's terrifying to play your favorite band's song in front of your favorite band.
When I wrote those two songs, I couldn't have been any closer to the bottom.
There were incredibly few rock songs making it out to the airwaves until the '80s came along.
My other advice is to start writing songs and singing right away.