• Also, right at that particular time in the music business, because of people like the Beatles, people began owning their own publishing. I'll just say this really quickly - they used to divide the money for the music that was written in two, just equal halves.
• So what I do, more than play any instrument - I mean, I love to play - but more than that, I write songs. Songs that are about living, about what it's like to be going through all the things that people go through in life.
• So I started playing the trumpet, and I lost interest in that and started playing guitar when I was about 12 or 13.
• That folk music led to learning to play, and making things up led to what turns out to be the most lucrative part of the music business - writing, because you get paid every time that song gets played.
• And my dad wanted me to play the trumpet because that's what he liked. His idol was Louis Armstrong. My dad thought my teeth came together in a way that was perfect for playing the trumpet.
• You would think with all the genius and the brilliance of these times, we might find a higher purpose and a better use of mind.
• And some of the songs I wrote when I was really young are some of my best-known songs, and other people still sing 'em, I still sing 'em.
• As far as those kinds of things, I also played at the concert to call for the release of Nelson Mandela when he was a political prisoner in South Africa. We were celebrating his 70th birthday and calling for his release.
• And that's a kind of censorship that exists in this country, because the sponsors of the television show have the legal right to do that. There was a delay. It went out live to most places, but the United States is eight or nine hours difference, so in that time, they edited it.
• I grew up reading Shakespeare and Mark Twain.
• When I really started liking music was when I could play some of it myself, and after a couple of years of playing folk music, I kinda rediscovered those hits that were on the radio all the time when I was a kid.
• We have an open society. No one will come and take me away for saying what I am saying. But they don't have to, if they can control how many people hear it. And that's how they do it.
• You can take as much as you can from the generation that has preceded you, but then it's up to you to make something new.
• I love to read. I love to stretch. In the morning, I get up, and if I'm not in a hurry, I will lie on the floor on a rug, look through some books and magazines, and maybe listen to music and try to do stretching exercises to tune up.
• People take different roads seeking fulfillment and happiness. Just because they are not on your road does not mean they have gotten lost.
• I never was a very good singer.
• I taught myself to play the piano, because I wanted to play it.
• I started playing the trumpet when I was about eight.
• I told my father I wanted to play the banjo, and so he saved the money and got ready to give me a banjo for my next birthday, and between that time and my birthday, I lost interest in the banjo and was playing guitar.
• I'd have to say that my favorite thing is writing a song that really says how I feel, what I believe - and it even explains the world to myself better than I knew it.
• I wrote the song For A Dancer for a friend of mine who died in a fire. He was in the sauna in a house that burned down, so he had no idea anything was going on. It was very sad.
• I've also gotten to play in front of a million people in Central Park when there was a grass roots movement calling for nuclear disarmament - it was about 1982 - they called it Peace Sunday.
• I've written many extra verses to songs that I learned to sing - an extra verse about a friend, or just add some verse - and that led to writing my own songs.
• Doctor my eyes, they can not see the sky. Is this the prize for having learned now not to cry?
• It was a great time to be born, because I got to have my own publishing company right from the beginning, so I made more money than somebody would have doing what I did ten or fifteen years before.
• Music itself is a great source of relaxation. Parts of it anyway. Working in the studio, that's not relaxing, but playing an instrument that I don't know how to play is unbelievably relaxing, because I don't have any pressure on me.
• Like, What is the least often heard sentence in the English language? That would be: Say, isn't that the banjo player's Porsche parked outside?
• Musician jokes are a kind of joke that usually have to do with how much money someone makes. Musicians are always starving, so they're really mean to each other about who makes what.
• The biggest influence? I've had several at different times - but the biggest for me was Bob Dylan, who was a guy that came along when I was twelve or thirteen and just changed all the rules about what it meant to write songs.
• That's maybe the most important thing each generation does, is to break a lot of rules and make up their own way of doing things.
• And while the future's there for anyone to change, still you know it's seems it would be easier sometimes to change the past.
• So I had a couple of years of playing trumpet. I really enjoyed it, but it was not the kind of instrument you could whip out at a party. Let's face it.
• So I gotta tell you that it's been part of a long, slow realization for me that censorship exists in our country.
• The idea that I wrote something that stood for the way I feel about things, and that it lasts, that's probably my favorite thing that I've done.
• Now, guitar was pretty cool. Everybody knew something on the guitar. So I wanted to play guitar, but I told my dad if he wanted me to keep studying something, I'd like to study piano.
• No matter how close to yours another's steps have grown, in the end there is one dance you'll do alone.
• Right around the end of the fifties, college students and young people in general, began to realize that this music was almost like a history of our country - this music contained the real history of the people of this country.
• People were learning to play traditional music, folk songs, and that's a big field - that's everything from blues to Appalachian music.
Jackson Browne Album Discography
2005 - Solo Acoustic, Vol. 1
2002 - The Naked Ride Home
1996 - Looking East
1993 - I'm Alive
1989 - World in Motion
1986 - Lives in the Balance
1983 - Lawyers in Love
1980 - Hold Out
1977 - Running on Empty
1976 - The Pretender
1974 - Late for the Sky
1973 - For Everyman
1972 - Jackson Browne
Jackson Browne Single Discography
2002 - The Night Inside Me
Useful Links: