Quotes on the topic: Records


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I think rock records tend to be very expensive.


I never thought I'd be doing records a year after I started - I had no idea it would last as long as it did.


I set records that will never be equaled. In fact, I hope 90% of them don't even get printed.


Formats are constantly changing, and there are really no rules for the way you put your records out anymore.


If you don't think drugs have done good things for us, then take all of your records, tapes and CD's and burn them.


I am terrified at the thought that so much hideous and bad music will be put on records forever.


But we will lose the millions of records being created daily in a dizzying array of electronic forms unless we find a way to preserve and keep them accessible indefinitely.


Records have images. There are wet records and dry records. And big records.


Records became much cruder in the last 20 years. Let's put it that way.


Sammy Davis, Andy Williams, Tony Bennett... their records sell in the millions; when I do it, it just trickles. But for the composer and lyricist, there's a tidy bit to be made that way, too, so I don't really mind.


I'll be writing records until I'm dead, whether people like it or not!


There's not a whole lot of media interest in me other than just the records that I make.


Growing up, we had folk records.


People still come up to me and ask me to sign their records. That's right, records! Man, they don't even make records no more!


It's typical of record companies. They sign you because you're unique, and then they want to put you in a mold so they can sell records.


I was signed by L.A. Reid on Arista Records when I was 16. He understood me and believed in me. Arista folded and I got put on RCA or whatever, then there were new people there, and every six months it changes and more new people come in.


There's a lot about records that you cannot feel from a CD.


I get nervous about gigs sometimes, but not with records - I always get excited.


I have been with the record company and Tommy was there doing records with other people.


Stevie Wonder's records introduced me to '70s soul when I was 12 or 13.