I just want to be like other people that are normal.
When you're making the record, you're not thinking about an audience, but you still need them and you want them.
I find it really disappointing and cheap when someone's copied the whole drum sound from a record.
I'll also listen to music on a Discman and realize how nice it can sound when it's not compressed to MP3 format.
I've always found it interesting when I'm the person in the audience feeling mismatched by what I've seen or heard. The shows I've taken the most from I may have not liked while I was there listening to it but, maybe an hour later, there's suddenly a lightening bolt out of the blue: "Oh, I'd see them again. "
It's an example of when three people think something's brilliant and one thinks it's terrible. I suppose that's what improvising can be like because you just don't really know how anyone's feeling about it. You come off stage like, "Was that good?"
I was listening to a lot more folk music. I love the sound of acoustic guitars but I didn't want to be that person standing up there strumming away.
Winners take the action that others won't.
That's the fun thing of casting a show. I'm a pretty strong believer that TV makes stars, not the other way around. I love the idea of having a cast where people don't associate them with too much baggage, so there's a certain amount of transparency between the character they're playing and the audience.
When a virtuous man is raised, it brings gladness to his friends, grief to his enemies, and glory to his posterity.
Raphael continued to stare at me, in no hurry to get started. "You know the best way to get rid of a demon, right?" He asked with a serious face. I caught Ivy rolling her eyes as I shook my head. "Exorcise alot!" Ivy caught my expression of dismay. "It's okay, Beth. He's famous for his bad jokes. We're still waiting for him to grow up. " "And like Peter Pan, I hope to avoid that at all costs.