74+ Bradford Cox Quotes On Music, Culture And Art

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  • Bradford Cox Quotes About Music
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Top 10 Bradford Cox Quotes

  1. Everything I do is 100% automation, which means I'm just doing it live.
  2. I always write the first and last song of an album first, and then the middle just kind of happens.
  3. The Internet nowadays is all sensationalism, and it's just terrifying when you're actually experiencing it as a person.
  4. I feel very strongly about the subject matter in The Dallas Buyer's Club - about AIDS and people fighting illnesses, and fighting for survival against bad conditions.
  5. I'm a really friendly guy, I guess, and I really like meeting people.
  6. I like my solitude, and I'm a strong-willed person; I'm a very hard-to-be-around person sometimes, I guess.
  7. You're always as a musician trying to shock yourself or create music that's maybe even too weird for your own taste.
  8. I need punk rock. It's the medicine for me, but it's bitter and sickening. If you don't need it - if you're happy and healthy - run toward that.
  9. When I started having a couple of beers and loosening up, I realized how many years I had wasted going back to my hotel room alone when I could have gone and just had a beer or two.
  10. I don't leave my room, and all I am surrounded by are guitars and equipment, y'know? It's not always the best place to be.

Bradford Cox Short Quotes

  • I'm obsessed with five different things a day. It's like lightbulbs in a Christmas light chain.
  • You don't need to drink if you have emotional problems.
  • I'm more into Neil Young and radical honesty.
  • I don't have the capacity to write stuff consciously. When I do, it's really awful.
  • I've always said I write albums; I don't write random songs and then sort them out.
  • It was like I was asking for attention, but I didn't really want attention.
  • When money and fame happen too late, it's like pouring kerosene over a fire of self-loathing.
  • I've been going through some personal things that have stirred up a lot of old wounds.
  • I see a lot of people doing an "'80s thing" who weren't even born until the '90s.
  • It's made me cynical at a young age to see how overlooked certain groups I've admired are.

Bradford Cox Quotes About Music

A lot of Appalachian music has a certain haunted, foggy feel to it; a certain sinister quality. And that transcends who is singing it. I think it's good if an artist can represent some kind of culture that they either aspire to ignite, or that they themselves experience. — Bradford Cox

I'm interested in acting as much as I'm interested in gardening. I want to garden, eventually. I want to learn how to do a lot of things. I've always wanted to learn how to paint, too. I'd like to try everything, but music is my reason for living. — Bradford Cox

I know so many people think my music is quite influenced by Animal Collective, but honestly I think maybe the factor is that we're both influenced by the same stuff. — Bradford Cox

I don't think you should make music to make music, just to show that you can. That's the opposite of vitality. — Bradford Cox

I don't think it will ever be lessened. Because I always move on to something else - and the music that I listen to, that I ingest, is a lot different than what I put out. I'm always becoming obsessed with the next phase of my musical vocabulary. — Bradford Cox

All music is devotional, whether it's devotion to products, face washes, creams, plastic. Everybody is devoted to something. — Bradford Cox

Unfortunately it's hard for me to be a fanboy for anything these days just because I see so much music. — Bradford Cox

My entire education in music was in reading interviews with bands like Stereolab and finding out about Brazilian music or a Romanian composer. You expose yourself to what people you look up to admire. — Bradford Cox

Bradford Cox Famous Quotes And Sayings

When I do a record, it sounds more punk and raw. Or it will sound louder, or it will sound more shocking. Or mind-boggling. I'll be trying to figure it out, but once I've got it figured out I'll be like, I know this; I know where this came from. I think art is most interesting when the intention is not clear. — Bradford Cox

I used to be a lot more engaged on an improvisational level than other people. I was always on tour and always had a guitar in my hands, and when I went back home, my battery was at full charge. I had a lot of energy to get off, just impulses that I could draw upon. — Bradford Cox

I read a lot - surveys of vernacular music. A lot of it is the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music, which I've loved since I was in high school. They had it at the library and I always thought that was interesting, even when I was into punk and stuff. Just the history of storytelling and the amount of melancholy a lot of old music has. — Bradford Cox

I've always been interested in writing from other people's perspectives and other gender perspectives. — Bradford Cox

I'm tired of watching attractive people trying to be ugly, struggling for authenticity. Why not be yourself? — Bradford Cox

Unlike the rest of everyone I hang around with, I don't drink, so I remember what happened after shows. And I have never hit on anyone after a show, I'm not that kind of person. Even if I was attracted to someone, I'd be too shy. — Bradford Cox

I want to satisfy the listener, exactly. I want to entertain the audience. I want the people to leave the show with the feeling I used to leave shows with when I was young, and I couldn't get over it for another three or four days after it. I just kept reliving the set in my mind. — Bradford Cox

For me, experimenting involves traditionalism. — Bradford Cox

I refuse to put myself into a situation in which I have to face some kind of "I'm losing it" kind of thing. I'm not "losing it"; it's changed. What it is is changing. — Bradford Cox

I've been used for writing rhythm guitar chords for a long time because it's so easy to play and chords just sound good on it. — Bradford Cox

We all come back to our little worlds. — Bradford Cox

People say 'I don't want to die alone!' But you know what, honestly? I don't want to die with a bunch of people looking at me. — Bradford Cox

I've been going through a lot of... stuff. I need some space, which people were very kind enough to give me, and I feel really gracious about that. Nobody forces me to do things or say things or do interviews. — Bradford Cox

I'm real critical of myself. I think a lot of what I've done is boring indie rock. I didn't intend it to be that way, but somehow milk gets added to everything. — Bradford Cox

You read about that Black Lips/Wavves fight as a spectator and you're like, "Oh man, I'm gonna pick a team to be on! I'm gonna put my two cents in as my status update on my Facebook page" or something. Not to sound like an anti-technology person, but it's just a real drag that people live their lives that way. — Bradford Cox

People roll their eyes and say, "Oh god, he's not rich or famous." I say it's relative. I mean, look at me: I'm 115 pounds and I grew up without money. To me, I'm rich because I don't have to worry about paying rent. I don't think about money now. — Bradford Cox

I'm working on one of the projects at a time and I'm the zone of that project. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with this, and I might experiment with it in the future, but I'm not a fan of just random assemblages of songs at the moment. — Bradford Cox

A lot of bands wanna do something new all the time and never repeat themselves, but I'm not so interested in that. If I feel like I can do it better the second time, I'll give it another shot. — Bradford Cox

I don't have anything to prove. — Bradford Cox

I am asexual. A-sexual. I read somewhere, maybe on Facebook, where somebody said something like, "I heard Bradford was gay, but then I heard he was bi." Then somebody wrote, "No, I heard he was asexual." And then somebody said, "That's bullshit - he totally hit on my friend after a show." — Bradford Cox

I think people are intimidated by me, and I don't know why. Sometimes even my own bandmates can be intimidated, or irritated, by me. — Bradford Cox

I don't know if I have any real aspirations to be an actor. It was just something I was asked to do in sort of a friend way. And I thought, Why not? — Bradford Cox

When you listen to the Anthology of American Folk Music, or anything like that - a compilation of garage bands from the Northeast in the early '60s - you're not necessarily listening to the band and thinking about the lead singer, or the story of the group, or the context or the mythology of the group. You're just listening to the song and whether or not it has a hook. — Bradford Cox

I've got this thing where I always kind of diss the older stuff and favor the newer stuff. I mean, it's not just my thing; every artist or musician is like that, I guess. — Bradford Cox

Talk to Arto Lindsay and I'm sure he's tired of people asking him about DNA; he's probably really into what he's doing now, which is good stuff. I guess I probably feel like that. But I'm obviously not comparing myself to someone as iconic as that. — Bradford Cox

I have really low self-esteem, and it's not easy for me to put myself on an album cover. — Bradford Cox

Usually I'm not really conscious of what's going on. I don't have a lot of memories onstage. At all. — Bradford Cox

You think about people like Elvis, Kurt Cobain, or the Beatles, who grew up without privilege and needed a certain validation through peoples' acceptance, or admiration from their peers. And money is part of that, but it always comes too late. — Bradford Cox

That's what culture is based on, the passing down of a certain narrative by imitation. — Bradford Cox

The sober guy is always going to have this air of arrogance or self-righteousness, but it's not my intention. I just knew that if I drank, I'd have a drinking problem. — Bradford Cox

If you're not Jay-Z, a record leaking isn't going to affect you. — Bradford Cox

Audiences tend to dig the earlier stuff by any given musician, and the artists themselves always tend to prefer the thing that they're doing now. — Bradford Cox

Everybody just needs to realize that when you write something you're just in one mood. I was told I needed to write it and it was overdue; I don't even remember what day it was. — Bradford Cox

As a homosexual, my job is simply to sodomize mediocrity. — Bradford Cox

When I go on a nostalgia trip it's not aesthetic. For me it's about trying to recapture the smell or the feeling of something that I've experienced in the past personally. — Bradford Cox

Musicians and artists are not... it's not like politicians or something where you can't really affect them. There's not like this separate caste system where it's like, "I'm the musician, you're the audience. Never the two shall meet." It was a case where it was like, "Hey, you know what? I'm on your level, man." — Bradford Cox

I don't like the sound of my own voice. And, for people I don't know, their impression of me is what they read on the internet, and they're so far off a lot of the time. — Bradford Cox

In reality, I've probably got the lowest self-esteem of anybody I know, which has really been rubbed in my face lately in personal situations. — Bradford Cox

Sometimes, I do have something to say, so I'll sit there and I'll write a song to someone - and then I just throw it away because it makes me cringe. — Bradford Cox

When I got hit by the car, I became depressed. As a result, I've been on antidepressants and I feel like I have no sexuality left. People complain about that side effect, but I love it. I feel outside of society. — Bradford Cox

The first thing I think I ever played in public, aside from singing in church, would have been - and this is a true story - when I was about nine or 10 years old, I was obsessed with Twin Peaks. I played the theme from Twin Peaks on a little tiny Casio keyboard. People politely applauded. I just fell in love with that song and thought it was very heartbreaking. — Bradford Cox

We didn't have MTV, and I was desperate for something. You know, you're young, you want something off the beaten path. And Twin Peaks was like, surrealism on network TV. — Bradford Cox

I collaborate a little bit with different aspects of my own mind. I kick my own ass instead of kicking other people's asses. — Bradford Cox

When young groups put out albums, they're always forced to go through this cycle of touring and talking and flaunting and posturing and peacocking. Nobody makes me do that anymore. — Bradford Cox

The same people that always think I'm pretentious will think I'm pretentious, and the people who relate to me will continue to relate to me. — Bradford Cox

I want the music to be heard as close to when I made it, as much as possible. I don't want to get into some "future of the music industry" thing, or where I stand on digital this or that, but I think it's ridiculous that a lot of people in the industry plan so far ahead that it makes a lot of improvisation impossible and makes a lot of people's expectations fixed and not fluid. — Bradford Cox

Life Lessons by Bradford Cox

  1. Bradford Cox's work demonstrates the power of creativity and self-expression, showing that it's possible to create something unique and inspiring even in the face of adversity.
  2. His music also serves as a reminder that it's important to take risks and push boundaries in order to find success and fulfillment.
  3. Finally, his work highlights the importance of staying true to yourself and embracing your own unique talents and perspectives in order to create something truly special.
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