I always sang standards because the songs I wrote for myself weren't as easy to sing.
I wrote a novel. It's called 'The Middlesteins.' It's fiction. It's not a memoir. I'm not a spokesperson.
I never kept a diary, but I wrote detailed notes of my travels.
I wrote a piece of software in 1998 that created fictional weather.
The very first song I wrote was about a boy that I was obsessed with.
I wrote the screenplay for 'This Is Where I Leave You' - all 40 drafts of it.
I merely took the energy it takes to pout and wrote some blues.
Brahms believed that there was no need to publish absolutely everything that Schubert ever wrote.
When I wrote those two songs, I couldn't have been any closer to the bottom.
I was separated from my wife at the time. A lot of people think I wrote it about prison.
Michael Rodgers: 'PWIP-PIP'? Who wrote that, Charles Dickens?
I was a 16-year-old girl at one point, so of course I wrote poetry.
I've always written poetry and lyrics. My first husband, who was a musician, we wrote a bunch of songs together.
I was sad Jon Ronson, who wrote in the Guardian and has made a TV show for Channel 4, took against me.
I love that Bob Dylan asked me to be in the first movie he wrote.
I never wrote music or arranged songs or lyrics when I was under the influence of anything but coffee. That's not gone away.
I wrote the music column in my high school newspaper.
My eldest brother Atticus just won an Oscar some years ago, as he wrote the music for 'The Social Network.'
Richard Wagner, a musician who wrote music which is better than it sounds.
The truth is, I wrote a novel when I was 23. It's hideously bad. Truly rotten.
It feels so satisfying to hear a song I wrote come out of the radio.