List of top 80 famous quotes and sayings about eazy e to read and share with friends on your Facebook, Twitter, blogs.
Top 80 Quotes About Eazy E
#1. I was 14 years old when I started rapping and I was terrible. I fell in love with it though and when that happens with me I become super passionate and go all the way with it.

#2. The boys in the hood are always hard.

#3. You have an entire generation of kids who grew up with the idea that music is something that you can download for free.

#4. In a sense, touring is crazy. You go city to city playing the show over and over again. But there's something magic about being in front of people, so it's not like going through the motions every night. It's a different experience.

#5. My mom was a single parent.

#6. Word of mouth is the most valuable form of marketing, but you can't buy it. You can only deliver it. And you have to really deliver.

#7. If you get it right, it's the most grand thing you could ever do. So many people let biopics slip through their fingers, but the opportunity to play Eazy-E could change my life.

#8. The kids from the streets don't want preaching or messages. They want what they can identify with. They want to hear about the reality of their situation, not fairy tales. They don't care if it's ugly; they just want reality.

#9. Fee fi foe fum, she's scratching on my back. Oh, here she comes.

#10. I think it's important to evolve and grow and take risks creatively, instead of repeating yourself and doing the same thing over and over.

#11. Jumped In The Fo' Hit The Juice On Ma Ride
I Got Front Back, And Side To Side

#12. I think it's important to say something. If you're making music it's kinda' like, oh, cool, so is everyone else.

#13. I'm on this raised-platform-stage and I'm put on display, but at the same time I'm just a human. I'm just a regular person at the end of the day and, you know, I just want them to know that I do appreciate every single one of them.

#14. What the cops did to Rodney King was wrong, and the officers who beat him should be sent straight to prison.

#15. You have this ability in hip hop to be invincibly cool, and that is a part of G-Eazy.

#16. I have seven children by six different mothers. Maybe success was too good to me.

#17. I don't know if most people know it or not, but I produce, like, 95% of my own stuff.

#18. Get thee behind me Satan, and push me along. I'm kin to the devil.

#19. I'm on Tumblr all the time.

#20. The biggest thing for me is the new music. I'm playing a lot of new music that is not released yet on my tours. Seeing the reaction to that is super inspiring.

#21. Another murder I committed made the front page.

#22. When I first decided I wanted to make beats and write songs and stuff like that, it wasn't like I sat down and the first thing I wrote was even halfway legit. It took a while to find my way through it.

#23. I got Ice Cube his start. I also launched Eazy-E.

#24. Just wearing all black comes from Johnny Cash. I'm on the road so much that if I wear all black, my clothes never get dirty. You can't tell if I've worn the same shirt twice.

#25. Growing up in New Orleans and just being in a poverty-stricken neighborhood gave me that same fire that Eazy had to separate himself from what could have ended up being such a bad situation.

#26. Why do you think the fans like us - why they prefer our street raps over all that phony stuff out there? Because we're telling the real story of what it's like living in places like Compton. We're giving them reality. We're like reporters. We give them the truth.

#27. I always think I'm going to record a lot on tour but it's always hard to fit it in the schedule, and there's a whole lotta' other extra curricular activities that happen on the road.

#28. I see myself as a hip-hop artist, but I never wanted to make music for a specifically white audience. That's not what I grew up around.

#29. Less is more. Simplicity is awesome. That's all you need in life. Its just my personal philosophy.

#30. A song or an album is never really done. You can work on it forever, but knowing when to call it a day and knowing when to walk away from it is extremely important.

#31. I think if you're constantly reinvesting into your content and giving the fans stuff, then you can continue to tour. You can continue to sell the merch and monetize the popularity of the brand.

#32. In the past, my process would start with a sample of another song, and I'd chop it up and use that as the basis of the song that I was making.

#33. I grew up in Oakland and Berkeley, California.

#34. I dunno, there were always people believing in me, but you just gotta be confident in whatever you wanna do.

#35. I've gone on in front of a crowd of 10 people and 7,000 people.

#36. I was slicking my hair back when I was in sixth grade.

#37. A solution to stop gang banging: SNOW!!

#38. I bet Eazy E is turning over in his grave,
to see that some of ya'll done made gangsta rap gay

#39. I was fortunate to have teachers that were flexible with allowing me to miss more class than I was supposed to be able to, for the sake of being able to tour.

#40. I've put myself in this position where I haven't set myself up with a Plan B. I don't have a safety net; it's all in.

#41. In my opinion, creative control means a lot, I feel like I'm really in touch with who my fans are and what they like about my music, and I'm able to communicate directly with them.

#42. I just kept telling myself that ultimately, the money that my grandparents had put away to go into my college fund, that they were investing for me to go to school and get this education, it had to be worth something.

#43. When you sample something, you're using the crutch of borrowing chords and melodies from a song that's already great, that's already stood the test of time, that's already special. When you're trying to do it all from scratch, you're writing something brand new that has to stand on its own.

#44. My mom would always play me a lot of late-'50s, late-'60s rock.

#45. 'Runaround Sue' was a big record for me, as well as the music video for it.

#46. I read the Steve Jobs book, and that kind of changed everything. I've been, like, an Apple geek my whole life and have always seen him as a hero. But reading the book, and learning about how he built the company, and maintaining that corporate culture and all that, I think that influenced me a lot.

#47. I think when you're telling a story from inside of you that's genuine, people connect with it.

#48. If I didn't make a single song in two months, I'm slippin'. You can't just party every night.

#49. What inspires me is the desire to be on. The desire to be successful. The desire to reach people through my music and make a living off it and never have to do anything else. Being able to do music full time and travel the world and share this music with everybody. That's the dream.

#50. I go to correctional facilities and talk to kids there. They have little kids in there who are, like, 12 years old, stealing cars and stuff like that.

#51. I always thought that one day I would be somebody. I would be successful in music, and I would have fans that cared about my music. At the same time, I really feel like an ordinary guy; I have been an ordinary guy forever.

#52. If you push yourself to stay hungry, you're always working towards at least taking steps forward. If you're taking steps forward, then you're making progress.

#53. Keeping in touch with the people that matter is important.

#54. Whenever I perform I try to connect with the crowd and give off energy so when they walk away from the show its remarkable and its something they talk about it, like 'damn I cant wait to come back to my show.'

#55. I hate picking out clothes.

#56. It iz comparitively eazy tew repent ov the sins that we hav committed, but tew repent ov thoze which we intend to commit, is asking tew mutch ov enny man, now days.

#57. In anything I do I try to stay true to myself because I think that's what matters most, and then the challenge is getting all these different sides of my personality to fit together in one box. It isn't an easy task. But that's basically what the end result represents.

#58. Movies don't make people act a fool. People act a fool because they want to act a fool.

#59. I think the special stuff [music] still finds a way to be heard, as long as you pair it with a good release strategy.

#60. No one survived on the streets without a protective mask. No one survived naked. You had to have a role. You had to be "thug," "playa," "athlete," "gangsta," or "dope man." Otherwise, there was only one role left to you: "victim.

#61. Police on my drawers
I had to pause
40 ounce in my lap
And it's freezing my balls

#62. I think, back in the day, when I was first starting to make music, all I wanted to do was to get a record deal.

#63. Who gave it that title, gangsta rap? It's reality rap. It's about what's really going on.

#64. When I started making music, I was so heavy into the hyphy movement. That's something you only know so much about if you were right there living in it, submerged in the culture.

#65. Touring is starting to feel more like home than home does.

#66. Music meant more to me than a social life and just hangin out. haha just being tired of repacking my suit case every couple of days, and anytime i wanted to cop some new clothes i would have to throw away something I had to make room in the suitcase.

#67. It was inspiring to see local legends like E-40 and Keak da Sneak break out with 'Tell Me When to Go.'

#68. When you're choosing the track list and the sequencing, it's important to make sure that there's some strong concepts on there and that it matters and it says something ... that it sticks with people.

#69. I didn't grow up around all white people; I never wanted to gentrify hip-hop, I've never wanted to speak to an all-white audience.

#70. Success is just being able to do what I love for a living, spend all my time doing it, connect with fans, and continue that for a long f - king time.

#71. I've dreamed of being on the road, traveling and touring, for as long as I've been into doing music. It's what I live for. I just wanna be Willie Nelson.

#72. I'm not a registered Republican or Democrat. I don't even vote.

#73. I know what it feels like to walk out in front of a sold-out crowd of a thousand people that are there for you, and how good that feels, but as an opener, you just have to train yourself to think that it's going to be harder.

#74. Hard, you know what I'm thinking, took the panties off and the pussy wasn't stinking.

#75. I don't want to be in somebody else's movie, and then they make all the money. I've gotten offers to do the movies, but I won't sell myself short and be in somebody else's movie, like 'Boyz N the Hood.' I don't think I woulda done that.

#76. I try to find 15 minutes a day to just be alone without any distractions just for headspace to meditate and get my Zen on. I think that helps me get through the hecticness of the day on tour with the interviews, the sound check, the meet and greets, the show and the post-show meet and greets.

#77. Nuthin' can avoid this shot 'cause it's hittin'
It's so cool when you touch it, wear a mitten

#78. My whole career has been from scratch, so I never took it for granted that people care and support what I do.

#79. When you're around somebody like E-40, all you can do is watch and learn, and soak up game.

#80. If you want to get your point across, you gotta cuss.
