
Top 77 Lucinda Williams Quotes
#1. Someone told me once that Lucinda Williams takes six years between albums, and that's what stuck to me; it's like, you really are a factory. You don't do things to make them, on your own time.
Beth Ditto
#2. I was down with Lucinda Williams and Mary Chapin-Carpenter. We did an acoustic tour, just the three of us, three chicks and three guitars.
Rosanne Cash
#3. I think in the world of rock music or whatever it's called - anything outside of Nashville - there's a lot more freedom within that industry to do whatever you want to do.
Lucinda Williams
#4. The more I separate myself from my upbringing, the more I appreciate what it's done for me.
Lucinda Williams
#5. I'm trying to learn how to tap into the power of my own being. I know it sounds corny.
Lucinda Williams
#7. I started writing songs, I guess, when I was about 13 or 14, but I didn't know if they were good enough yet or anything.
Lucinda Williams
#8. I grew up in a very literate, very independent household where people spoke their ideas and were very supportive of helping each other find their own way.
Lucinda Williams
#9. You should put time into learning your craft. It seems like people want success so quickly, way before they're ready.
Lucinda Williams
#10. I usually have an idea of how I want a song to sound, but I don't always know how to get there.
Lucinda Williams
#11. Believe it or not, people went so far as to suggest that I might not be able to write songs anymore because now I am married. I tried to explain again that there are other things to write about besides boy meets girl, girl meets boy, boy breaks up with girl, girl is sad.
Lucinda Williams
#12. I have such a great band. We had played all this material on the road. I just wanted to let it fly.
Lucinda Williams
#13. I grew up around poets and novelists and my dad wrote poems about everything - from a cat sleeping in a window to a car wreck he passed on the highway. I learned not to censor myself: that was one of things I learned in my apprenticeship, my creative-writing apprenticeship with my dad.
Lucinda Williams
#14. I would worry if I wasn't coming up with ideas, if I wasn't inspired.
Lucinda Williams
#15. The man I lived with is a Christian, so I would talk to him about it. What would this person do in the Bible? What's the story around this person? Generally, when people talk about characters in the Bible, there's one thing they're known for, like Job.
Lucinda Williams
#16. I have to try different things to see what works best. Other people get impatient with that.
Lucinda Williams
#17. I'm an artist first and foremost. So things are gonna go up and down and sideways and whichever way all through life.
Lucinda Williams
#18. Sometimes I might borrow something from a song I started a long time ago and see if I can grab something.
Lucinda Williams
#19. I'm always writing ideas down and then I stick em in my pocket and put em in that folder so I don't lose them. Like, somebody might say something, and I'll go, oh that's a good line, and that goes in the folder, too. It's kind of an ongoing process for me.
Lucinda Williams
#20. The old jazz singers or old blues singers, you always just saw them kind of sitting down and singing. They weren't worried as much about their voice sounding perfect. They would make the song kind of fit their voice.
Lucinda Williams
#21. I didn't grow up in a mom-and-pop, Ozzie and Harriet type of environment, but who did.
Lucinda Williams
#23. I'd rather play a few nights at the Fillmore than play one night at an arena.
Lucinda Williams
#24. My approach to recording and all that is pretty organic. It just has to do with all the songs I wrote; go in and record them.
Lucinda Williams
#25. I love Emmylou Harris's version of my song, 'Sweet Old World.' Her intonation is great.
Lucinda Williams
#26. I've had trouble being in relationships and writing. This has been a real problem for me. I don't know if it's because I'm not free to fantasize or create these fantasy things about other people.
Lucinda Williams
#27. I don't mean to complain. I wouldn't trade my life for anything.
Lucinda Williams
#28. I'm always coming up with ideas that have been inspired by memories, everyday life and this and that and the other.
Lucinda Williams
#30. Back in the 1960s, I saw Peter, Paul and Mary. I was at that age, about 14, and I was mesmerized.
Lucinda Williams
#31. People seemed to think, you get to a certain age or you get married or you, you're comfortable. And so now there's nothing to write about: that angst is gone. The youthful angst. And that just hasn't happened with me.
Lucinda Williams
#32. I certainly had my God-can-you-just-take-me-now-I've-just-had-it-I'm-checking-out-let-me-off-the-train-I'm-done kind of thing. But, you know, I would never actually do it. I just can't imagine what it would take to do that.
Lucinda Williams
#33. In so many interviews, they bring up the sexual aspect of the record. I've had some journalists say it sounds like I'm lying down in bed singing with a microphone. It gets so old!
Lucinda Williams
#34. Some of their best songs don't have bridges and choruses. So that made me think I should trust my instincts. My songs were okay, I figured. I didn't need to change anything.
Lucinda Williams
#35. As it turns out, now is the moment you've been waiting for
Lucinda Williams
#36. There's so many other things to write about than unrequited love.
Lucinda Williams
#37. When the muse hits me, or the mood, or whatever it is, I get my guitar out and I empty it out. I just start going through things to see what's going to happen.
Lucinda Williams
#38. Sometimes I dream song ideas. I write a song in my dream, the melody and everything. But then sometimes I can't remember them. I think later on, I probably do.
Lucinda Williams
#39. I was immediately taken with Geoff Muldaur's rich soulful voice, masterful phrasing and guitar playing when I first heard him.
Lucinda Williams
#40. There's this whole idea that you've got the blues and you're going to write. Bullshit. When I feel really bad, all I want to do is sit in front of the TV with the remote control and check out.
Lucinda Williams
#41. I am trying to get right with God. I'm sort of making a statement about the excessiveness.
Lucinda Williams
#42. I started writing little short stories and poems as soon as I learned to read and write. I think I was six years old. And then when I got to be eleven, twelve, and into my teens, I was just listening to records all the time, and I got a guitar. I started to take guitar lessons when I was twelve.
Lucinda Williams
#43. I write the songs, go in and record them, then I listen to everything and decide how it all fits together.
Lucinda Williams
#44. I'm fascinated by the whole concept of snake handling. When you read about the Pentecostal snake handlers, what strikes you the most is their commitment.
Lucinda Williams
#45. People let their own hang-ups become the obstacles between them and personal happiness.
Lucinda Williams
#46. I just broke up with my boyfriend, and I've been spending more time alone than I'd like.
Lucinda Williams
#48. Above all, the listener should be able to understand the poem or the song, not be forced to unravel a complicated, self-indulgent puzzle. Offer your art up to the whole world, not just an elite few.
Lucinda Williams
#49. I'm pretty much the same person I was 20 years ago. My politics haven't changed. I have the same feeling of idealism. But I am a little bit wiser and more experienced.
Lucinda Williams
#50. I have a folder of scraps and pieces of paper with stuff, ideas for songs from the last 25 years; just little things, maybe early songs that I finished, but didn't think they were good enough.
Lucinda Williams
#51. I can speak for most songwriters - those breakup love songs are so easy to write, as far as the inspiration and all that.
Lucinda Williams
#52. I'm not just a doormat. I'm not just being stepped on all over the place. If you look at the bulk of my material, it's about trying to find some strength through that.
Lucinda Williams
#53. You can't really praise somebody's work and then criticize the process.
Lucinda Williams
#54. The thing about Alzheimer's is that it's ... it's sort of like all these little, small deaths along the way, before they actually physically die.
Lucinda Williams
#55. It's really about living in your head ... just looking out at the world, then going back into your head and tossing around a lot of ideas and coming out with something interesting to say.
Lucinda Williams
#56. Any time there's a major change, whether it's going into a relationship, getting out of a relationship, moving to a new city, a death - that usually provides a catalyst for an explosion of creativity.
Lucinda Williams
#58. If you come into success too soon, you'll burn out and be finished before you know it. If you let the maturation process happen naturally, you'll be happier with yourself in the end.
Lucinda Williams
#59. Of course, I'm older now. I'm in a different place in my life than when I wrote the songs for 'Car Wheels' or 'Essence' or whatever. Different things were going on.
Lucinda Williams
#61. We just did a few takes of a song and just picked the best one. It was real organic and genuine.
Lucinda Williams
#62. I feel like it's really kind of a sit-down album, much in the same way I imagine Billie Holiday or someone sitting down in the studio and singing.
Lucinda Williams
#63. Sade's stuff is real deceptive. She's got stuff about prostitutes, poverty and people on the streets.
Lucinda Williams
#64. It's just the more you do it the better you get, or at least that's how I feel in my case. I think it's a combination of confidence and just having done it this long and just learning. I'm always learning. I'm still honing my craft.
Lucinda Williams
#65. I usually don't write about my life right when it happens. I process it, and I store it away. Then, when I get in the mood I pull the stuff back out.
Lucinda Williams
#66. So few people are truly themselves when they're in the spotlight.
Lucinda Williams
#67. I'm dealing with things as they come along, and I'm talking about it.
Lucinda Williams
#68. I'm just like everyone. I like to feel togetherness with someone.
Lucinda Williams
#71. I write first for myself as a therapeutic process, to get stuff out and to deal with it.
Lucinda Williams
#72. I'm polite. I guess that's the dichotomy within me. I don't like to piss people off just for the sake of pissing them off. I pick my battles.
Lucinda Williams
#73. Just because I'm talking about something that might have been a sad or painful situation doesn't mean that I'm sad or tortured 24 hours a day any more than anybody else is.
Lucinda Williams
#74. First thing, I throw on some jeans, a T-shirt and my Keds sneakers and make coffee. That is actually my favorite time of day. That is when I do my songwriting, when I am in writing mode.
Lucinda Williams
#75. I guess you could write a good song if your heart hadn't been broken, but I don't know of anyone whose heart hasn't been broken.
Lucinda Williams
#76. I feel a lot more comfortable being me these days. I'm constantly told that my work is good. A lot of fans and a lot of other artists say my songs and albums mean a lot to them. Isn't that what's important?
Lucinda Williams
#77. The way I look at life, whatever I'm doing at that time in my life is going to be reflected in my songs, for the most part.
Lucinda Williams
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