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Daryl Hall Quotes

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If you take a bunch of superstars and put them in a room where they don't have their assistants and entourage, it's funny to see what happens.

This illness made it impossible for me to give my best effort to our audience, but now that it's been identified, I'm looking forward to a complete, quick recovery and to get back out there with John as soon as possible.

I returned to upstate NY where I just laid in bed for days with a fever that just wouldn't go away. After more of this, I grew increasingly sure that this was not simply the flu!

Chronic Lyme causes arthritis, heart problems, stroke - even death.

Smokey Robinson is one of my heroes as a singer and songwriter; a major influence on my own music from the very start.

Everybody who I ever cared about has told me that they like my music: Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, Al Green, The Spinners, Smokey Robinson. Everybody that matters.

Traditionally, duos get accused of lots of things.

I grew up in a very racially integrated place called Pottstown. It was an agricultural / industrial town which has since become a suburb of Philadelphia. I grew up basically in a black neighborhood.

Yes, I travel in unusual circles. George Osborne and his wife Frances are my cousins.

I have an English family and I've lived in England for years.

I wanted to show the world, and myself too, what I can do. I came up in the world of Philadelphia soul, but I'm fluent in a lot of languages musically and I like working with different people from different generations.

If you work hard and you're good, you can build something for yourself.

The difference between me and other people in my generation is instead of saying the Internet's killing the record business, I say, 'Who cares about the record business, the Internet is enhancing music.'

I was a pioneer in MTV and I was there from the very beginning. So I saw how that developed and how loose it was and how much fun it was in its looseness. And I was influenced a lot by that.

I have to say I have never been comfortable with somebody else telling me what to do - in any way.

I was just like a 21st century person waiting to be born, and this is the medium that I thrive in. And I feel stronger now than I did any time since I've been a teenager - I mean, musically, creatively.

Like all soul singers, I grew up singing in church but sometimes I would leave early and sit in the car listening to gospel band, The Blind Boys of Alabama. Hearing their lead singer Clarence made me connect the idea of church and show business and see how I could make a career singing music that stirred the soul.

I was very inspired by my mother. She was a vocal teacher and sang in a band, and my first memories of her were going out with her on the local circuit.

I definitely dislike pomposity and artifice. I hope that I'm not that. Once I write a song, it belongs to the world, and the way people perceive it, it's cool.

If Paul McCartney tells me that so-and-so song is his favorite song, what do I care? What do I care what anybody else says?

I'm in the trenches; I do the best work I can always do. Having said that, the way that what I do converges with the outside world is fascinating to me. Because it ebbs and flows. People's interest and understanding, it changes all the time.

Being at college, I think that's the time when you really start searching for things outside yourself.

The first thing I ever did was play talent shows at the Uptown Theater and the Adelphi Ballroom.

When I was a kid, I always looked up to people like B.B. King and Ray Charles.

In the early '70s, I started to feel like Philadelphia soul was the black-sheep brother of rock and roll. I decided to try to get away from it.

All artists have insecurity.

You don't have to be a good singer any more if you can rap well.

You don't have to be a good musician if you've got certain computer skills.

I'm not a big fan of any video, especially my own. In a word, I hated the Hall & Oates videos.

Nixon was the beginning of people not trusting politics.

I don't really strain my voice.

The 'Daryl's House' thing has made me into a live musician even more than I ever was, and even in the way I record.

I've been watching RFD-TV for a few years. As a person who lives mostly in the country, I appreciate a network that shows the many facets of rural life.

I have gone from one relationship to a marriage and stepchildren.

Who knows what the right time to get married is?

I'm used to the egos in the 1960s, '70s and '80s where people just expected massive success and thought it was their birth right to be successful.

I never felt entitled to anything. I'm the hardest worker I know.

I was always an introvert as a kid. Then, when I first kind of came out as a human being, I used to be one of those guys who'd go nuts on the dance floor, and people would gather around.

I do a project, and then I move on.

Most artists try to avoid cliches, but it's pretty hard to avoid them if you yourself end up being one.

I'm just about the best singer I know, and it's time for everybody to say that. I have total facility with my voice. And for some weird reason, critics don't talk about it.

Americans think that if you're popular, there must be something wrong with you.

Obscurity is just obscurity. There's no romance in obscurity.

I'm very enthused about everything. I have a lot to say and a lot of things I'm interested in.

My fan base is really expanding into an inter-generational thing - it's what every artist probably hopes for.

To write a good song, an artist has to drawn from reality. There has to be some spark from realism that communicates a real feeling to someone else. You have to be real. Or you have to be a really good storyteller.

I've been traveling around the world forever.

If you can sing, you never lose your voice. If you don't know how to sing, your voice goes away because you sing from your throat.

I'm a born collaborator. This is what I was born to do, really.

I'm quite an eclectic musician.

I had the idea of 'Live From Daryl's House' way before I contracted Lyme disease.

Art is a continuum.

I'm constantly on my toes and re-examining my own music.

The Internet allows me to be more free.

I love antique architecture, so if I have any indulgences, I have owned and renovated and reconstructed a lot of old houses.

I've watched the world crash and burn in every sense. I've watched the record industry crash and burn; politically I've watched it crash and burn, financially crash and burn.

You externalise extreme emotions, and you look at them objectively and understand them from a different standpoint.

I'd like to see more crossover between white and black music. That's something I've been advocating for years.

The whole American pop culture started in Philadelphia with 'American Bandstand' and the music that came out of that city.

For years and years, I was beset with snide remarks by certain members of the press, where they would turn John Oates into a joke, or they would trivialize what I do, which never really bothered me all that much.

I always say the same thing - believe in what you do, do it, and don't veer away from the truth of it.

As I got older, my voice got better.

If you see me walking down the street, you're gonna see the same guy as you do on stage, dressed the same, looking the same, and nothing changes. I'm just one person.

Reject what you don't want. Get rid of dead wood.

I think Philadelphia has been underrated over the years as a musical region.

The biggest honor of my career was when I won R&B Artist of the Year back in the 1970s. I look at that as a major honor.

I'm always interested in what fans think.

The song 'Laughing Down Crying' is not a typical Daryl song.

I don't like showboating. I was never a fan of showing off.

As a singer, I float around. I'm kind of scatty, bouncing around a lot. I try to adapt to what's going on around me in the song and the arrangement.

Nobody really cares about what other people think anymore; they're all about themselves.

The late 20th century had just enough communication abilities to allow superstar-ness and communality to happen. It was a musical renaissance that rivals the visual one that happened in the 1400s.

Late 20th century music was a really important thing. It changed the world, and I'm part of that, and now I'm part of the museum that celebrates that.

I specialize in early homes, and what I care about the most is renovating a home and taking it back to its original construction idea.

In my Philly neighborhood, black and white kids hung together without even thinking about it. The spirit of Martin Luther King was alive and well.

What I do isn't black music; it's just my music.

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