My music isn't anything but me. It has jazz in it, and rock'n'roll, and it has an urgency to it.Collection: Music
The rockets and the satellites, spaceships that we're creating now, we're pollinating the universe.Collection: Space
The '60s was one of the first times the power of music was used by a generation to bind them together.Collection: Music
It's cool to go places where working people are happy.Collection: Cool
Earth is a flower and it's pollinating.Collection: Nature
Live music is better.Collection: Music
I don't look at a knife the way I used to. I'm more aware of what it is. I think twice. This is a key finger. It's in every chord.
With Crazy Horse, it's all one big, growing, smoldering sound, and I'm part of it. It's like gliding, or some sort of natural surfing.
As I get older, I get smaller. I see other parts of the world I didn't see before. Other points of view. I see outside myself more.
This thing called Patriot Act, through which we abdicated a lot of our civil rights to defend the country against terrorism, it's a four-year story.
I was a Reagan backer. It was a shock for some people that I could agree with anything that man would say.
I think I'm going to be making country records for as long as I can see into the future. It's much more down-home and real.
When you're young, you don't have any experience - you're charged up, but you're out of control. And if you're old and you're not charged up, then all you have is memories. But if you're charged and stimulated by what's going on around you, and you also have experience, you know what to appreciate and what to pass by.
When the punk thing came along and I heard my friends saying, I hate these people with the pins in their ears. I said, Thank God, something got their attention.
I'm not into organized religion. I'm into believing in a higher source of creation, realizing we're all just part of nature.
To protect our freedoms, it seems we're going to have to relinquish some of our freedoms for a short period of time.
All that stuff about heavy metal and hard rock, I don't subscribe to any of that. It's all just music. I mean, the heavy metal from the '70s sounds nothing like the stuff from the '80s, and that sounds nothing like the stuff from the '90s. Who's to say what is and isn't a certain type of music?
Back then people closed their eyes and listened to music. Today there's a lot of images that go with the music. A lot of music is crap and it's all commercial and the images are all trying to sell the record.
Some people put down all presidents. If you say anything good about any of them, they think you're supporting everything they do.
When people start asking you to do the same thing over and over again, that's when you know you're way too close to something that you don't want to be near.
I didn't really know what I was doing when I started. I just started writing songs. After two songs I just continued to explore it.
I don't like to be labeled, to be anything. I've made the mistake before myself of labeling my music, but it's counter-productive.
I don't like war. I particularly don't like the celebration of war, which I think the administration is a little bit guilty of.
I don't think there is one president that's come down the line that hasn't done something good somewhere.
I go in and sing the song and arrange it and mix it and that's it. It's no different than playing in clubs.
I have so many opinions about everything it just comes out during my music. It's a battle for me. I try not to be preachy. That's a real danger.
I live for playing live. All my records are live, since After the Gold Rush, with the exception of Trans and the vocals on Landing on Water.
Of course you have to support the troops. They're just kids. They're doing for their country what's expected of them.
Studios are passe for me. I'd rather play in a garage, in a truck, or a rehearsal hall, a club, or a basement.