Band Quotes
Most Famous Band Quotes of All Time!
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What we used to say was whoever had the bow tie got to lead the band. There was never any jealousy.
I started in a band called 'Timbiriche', we toured the world when I was 8; I have 23 albums.
I was such a massive fan of all the '60s pop bands, but if I had to single out one band, it would definitely be The Beatles.
One of the main things we learned as a band in those days was not to be the headliner.
A rock band with vocals is what I always wanted to be a part of; in fact, it feels very natural for me.
Personality-wise, I'm much more suited to be in a band and part of an ensemble than I am to lead. I never have been comfortable with the leading thing.
My current project is my band, Population 1. We are writing, rehearsing and playing in Los Angeles.
It's really exciting and kind of special, especially having our own band. It's just completely different.
In a lot of aspects it's cooler that we don't have a lot of really overly famous people in the band.
I met the Santana band when I was 14. By the time I was 15, I was a member of the band.
I love playing with Slash, and the chemistry I have with the rest of the guys in his band is fantastic.
I am very excited to explore the genre of horror-comedy with 'Band Baja Bandh Darwaza.'
In 'Boondien' I worked with a band where everyone had their own instrument to play.
We learned pretty early on in this band that you can't have snobbery in music.
When I was in high school, if my favorite band got too popular, I'd watch carefully.
There has to be an element of danger, or at least an element of intrigue, for a band to be interesting.
It's nice to finally have a CD out which reflects my songwriting, my singing and the band that I have.
When we first started, we were a band from Athens and that was so off the map.
So, we went from being an Athens band to being a Georgia band to being a Southern band to being an American band from the East Coast to being an American band and now we're kind of an international phenomenon.
The band changes one guy, sometimes the whole damn thing changes - look what happened when I joined Van Halen.
I started at home as a kid putting on shows and lip-syncing Michael Jackson for the grown-ups. Then, in musicals and plays in school. At 17, I was performing in coffee shops and in parking lots at Phish shows. At 18, I had a band that played local shows in the Northwest.
I worked as an artist, played in a band, met Andy Warhol, Christo, Lou Reed, and David Byrne. I had fun.
It creates a conflict of interest - what songs would I use for me, and what would I use for the band.
While I was into many different types of music, and played with many different local groups, I really didn't have a band to call my own until Dire Straits was formed in 1977.
I actually studied engineering in school - I have a degree in mechanical engineering. But, when I got out of school, instead of going to work as an engineer, I was in a band.
My touring band, they're just brilliant, and all of them are learning ASL, so the wall of communication is breaking.
My band, Miles Long, is a jazz-funk spoken word band. There's jazz sensibilities, but I'm a bass player, so I'm very much into the head-bobbing vibe with sophisticated lyrics.
I was a groupie for a year and followed a band. I dated the drummer of the band.
The secret ballot makes a secret government; and a secret government is a secret band of robbers and murderers.
It's been too many years since I've played live as myself as opposed to in a fake band for a film.
I have no skanky guys in my band nor on my bus. If they are they get the boot real quick.
Dweezil and I are going on tour with the band probably starting in the middle of February for a month probably playing a few songs from my new record and then I'll continue on after that tour.
My dad was a bass player in a Latino band when I was growing up. So we always had musical instruments in our basement.
The Band never really played big concert tours. We never sold millions and millions of albums.
When the second record came out, they started calling it The Band. I voted to call it The Crackers. I'm no fool.
I guess, from the beginning, Thurston and Kim were the dominant singers in the band, and although I was singing in bands previously, I guess I mainly deferred to them a lot in terms of who was singing the bulk of the songs.
We're not really an underground band anymore, and we're not a mainstream band, either.
Usually my records are made trying to capture the essence of a band playing in a room.
I was so anxious to succeed that I made a practice of appearing on all the disc jockey shows I could, in order to publicize the band.
I was in a band when I was 15. We were a glam band. Then I couldn't afford to buy makeup. At the time that was the thing.
I am the extreme member of the band because I never go out after the show. It's my rule.
The only band that we have never played with but have always wanted to is the Rolling Stones.
When I listen to a Coldplay record, you're gonna hear an indie band, and you know that's what you're gonna get from Coldplay. With myself, I'm not sure it's the same.
There's a social piece to what's going on in the Sugarland world, but we've never been a band that's political, and I maintain that.
I'm not a huge practicer, which is probably not a good thing because my band definitely needs to practice.
One thing I learned is that I don't want to be in an all-girl band again. Besides, most of my friends are guys, anyway.
I'm a huge fan of sing-songy lyrics and loud guitars. Whatever punk band does that gets a gold star!
I do listen to some music, but I don't technically have one band I'm absolutely hooked on.
My band and I, we cover our bodies in hairspray and glitter. We use the hairspray to make sure the glitter sticks.
The Millennium Stadium thing was for the Tsunami concert. It was a thing that I think every band in the country would have liked to be a part of at the time that it happened.
The only things Mick and I disagree about is the band, the music and what we do.
It's a bit of a bold statement, but the Prodigy should be seen as an important cultural band.
If I had to choose between the band or the friendships, I'd choose the friendships at this point.
In the late '90s, we kind of took a sabbatical, and I got an invitation to play with a Japanese band and formed a supergroup called NiNa. It was Yuki from Judy and Mary and Masahide Sakuma from The Plastics, a Japanese equivalent of the B-52s. It went to No. 1 in Japan.
There's a very collaborative, collective attitude. That's a very female principle. We try to nurture that aspect of the band.
There was just one time when the band took a big break, and I did that Nina project in Japan in 1999.
Honestly, before I settled on a name for the Bon Iver project in general, Chigliak was in the running for what I was going to name the band.
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