Top 43 Duncan Sheik Quotes
#1. I did a 20-minute selection of scenes from the play 'Spring Awakening' in college, well before the musical came around, so when the musical was becoming a hot thing, and I was reading interviews with Duncan Sheik about how he came to do the music, I think it's interesting.
Allison Tolman
#2. I'm not a great guitarist, but I do bits and bobs. I'm mainly a songwriter and a composer. I've done a lot of scoring and some stuff for British pop music that did pretty well, but I've mainly been working on my own stuff with Duncan Sheik.
Matthew James Thomas
#3. I have been involved with 'Spring Awakening' for six years. I am 20 now - I just turned 20 in August - and I originally auditioned when I was 14 years old. I auditioned for Michael Mayer, Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater.
Lea Michele
#4. I would be willing to do any role Duncan Sheik asked me to play.
Nikki Blonsky
#5. Duncan Sheik and I are trucking along on 'American Psycho,' which is sort of the anti-Superman, you know? But it's a lot of fun, too, in a much, much darker way, obviously.
Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
#6. I try to make sure that the Buddhism is more or less implicit in the music rather than explicit.
Duncan Sheik
#7. I'd have these weird experiences where I'd just be walking down the street with this chord progression in my head, this happened more than a few times, and I'd walk home and find a fax in my machine and it would match the music in my head.
Duncan Sheik
#8. If I were to do this over I'd play a lot more shows before I made a record.
Duncan Sheik
#9. Emerson, Lake & Palmer or King Crimson or Gentle Giant - the worst prog rock references I can come up with. Though I totally loved those groups as a kid.
Duncan Sheik
#10. But really important, perhaps most important is the craft; how you make your record, the creation of these sonic worlds you want your listener to hear.
Duncan Sheik
#11. Things come to me pretty regularly. There is never a shortage or a backlog.
Duncan Sheik
#12. I'm fortunate I have this coterie of musicians around me to help take music to next level. Being surrounded by so much creative energy, so many creative people really feeds that creativity in me.
Duncan Sheik
#13. I actually am always a music first person.
Duncan Sheik
#14. Ultimately, if I'm really moved by something, it's going to go on the record and that's that.
Duncan Sheik
#15. But I can't really say there is too much modern music that I'm blown away by at this moment.
Duncan Sheik
#16. I certainly wouldn't say that my life is a disaster, but there have been moments where I've felt like that.
Duncan Sheik
#17. I think in a way I was probably completely naive about what it takes to make something become a hit.
Duncan Sheik
#18. A real foolproof way to do it is play your stuff by hook or by crook and build up a grass roots following.
Duncan Sheik
#19. Lately I've been a workaholic. I'm in the studio all the time and I've helped to produce a couple of artists.
Duncan Sheik
#20. So, once I've written a song, you know, I'm pretty happy with what the song is on its own terms.
Duncan Sheik
#21. Simon Hale, the British arranger, does all string and wood arrangements on my records.
Duncan Sheik
#22. And frankly, when I made that record, hit songs were not what I was trying to achieve.
Duncan Sheik
#23. When I was a teenager, I got into four track recorders, drum machines, and synthesizers, and I started producing instrumental music.
Duncan Sheik
#25. I think my Buddhist practice has a profound influence on my life and encompasses my creative projects.
Duncan Sheik
#26. I'm a pretty big P.J. Harvey record fan and you can really hear New York in his record.
Duncan Sheik
#27. Because of my Buddhist practice, I'm never lacking for inspiration.
Duncan Sheik
#28. I did a song, "Court and Spark," for a Joni Mitchell tribute album that's yet to see the light of day. So she's someone I'd like to do something with, sure. I worked with the great guitar player Bill Frisell on Phantom Moon - that was fun. I'm such a fan; he's amazing.
Duncan Sheik
#29. I got a publishing deal with BMG, they were supportive, and some money to record demos.
Duncan Sheik
#30. My first two records were more energetic; Phantom Moon is subtle, quiet; so these various reactions are just something I expected.
Duncan Sheik
#31. I also wanted to make a record that was about other things than romance, yeah, after two years on the road singing all the songs from the first album, I got kind of tired of that.
Duncan Sheik
#32. I mean, at the end of the day when I'm making a record, what I want to do is what I do.
Duncan Sheik
#33. I started playing music at a pretty young age.
Duncan Sheik
#35. The difficult thing about a pop record is that you're given guidelines: it has to have 3 choruses, and then it must be between 3 minutes fifteen seconds and three minutes forty-five seconds.
Duncan Sheik
#36. I actually think sadness and darkness can be very beautiful and healing.
Duncan Sheik
#37. For my second record I had gotten ProTools (program) and started to familiar myself with hard disc recording.
Duncan Sheik
#38. My second record was all about big ideas - I was trying to make big statements about the culture, about life. I think in a certain way, I was a 27 year old kid with a guitar.
Duncan Sheik
#39. I feel fortunate about being able to make the music I want to make and getting away with it.
Duncan Sheik
#40. It's inevitable your environment will influence what you do.
Duncan Sheik
#42. So I started chanting when I was nineteen, which was about twelve years ago, and it really had a huge impact on my outlook, happiness, and general creativity.
Duncan Sheik
#43. The experiences of promoting my first album were really something; there is so much illusion in my environment (touring and pop music) that I wanted to clear away.
Duncan Sheik
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top