Top 18 Robert Quine Quotes
#2. By many peoples' standards, my playing is very primitive but by punk standards, I'm a virtuoso.
Robert Quine
#3. I really feel fortunate to have been around then because there have been good and bad years in rock but the best years were '55 to early '61. I got to see Buddy Holly and everybody else.
Robert Quine
#4. It was just like Howlin' Wolf. Once you arrive at the point that you understand it, the emotional factor is darker than some of the saddest blues stuff.
Robert Quine
#5. I saw Suicide in '74 and it was pretty horrifying.
Robert Quine
#6. After I exhausted the blues thing, I got into jazz.
Robert Quine
#7. From '69 til '76, I never played in public. I would play by myself at home.
Robert Quine
#8. Even by the time I was four or five, I had Gene Autry records.
Robert Quine
#9. The Stones were nasty and ugly and doing songs I was familiar with.
Robert Quine
#10. I think Blank Generation holds up pretty well. You listen to that with headphones and there's a lot going on there with the guitars- it's the product of a lot of fighting.
Robert Quine
#11. By then I was in Brooklyn and drank my way through that summer. I stopped when I got sick of that and got a job at the Strand bookstore, which was a little better than the tax job.
Robert Quine
#12. My playing started to develop through the Miles Davis stuff I was listening to.
Robert Quine
#13. Meanwhile after failing the bar twice, I knew some people in New York and moved here in August '71.
Robert Quine
#14. I quit the tax job then and decided that I was going to play in a band. I answered ads in the Village Voice and went through two days of auditioning for bands.
Robert Quine
#15. I started off with the really funky stuff like Ramsey Lewis, Milt Jackson, Kenny Burrell.
Robert Quine
#16. Reading music is something that's inherently hateful to me. It makes music like mathematics.
Robert Quine
#17. I was 12 in '55 when rock and roll hit. It just completely transformed me.
Robert Quine
#18. I was coerced into taking piano lessons in the early '50s. It was a quite unpleasant experience.
Robert Quine
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