Zitat des Tages von Alex Kapranos:
The best songwriting comes from being as creative as you can and editing it down to the good bits, essentially.
There's a character that I play onstage, and I can't let him loose in the supermarket when I'm buying my beans on toast.
It doesn't matter how adventurous you want to be, you've still got to contain your identity.
It's very rare that a song falls from your mind complete.
I think a lot of bands are creatively knackered when they come off tour.
Of course, there's a certain type of person who feels that anything which becomes mainstream has to be rejected immediately. And that's part of the indie-alternative snobbery and hierarchy and elitism.
I really want it to have an impact on the world. I want to be in a town on the other side of the world, and somebody walks up and says, 'That music you made in Glasgow, I listened to it every day, and it moved me.'
I didn't grasp the basic principle of being a promoter, which was: Put on music but also generate an income. I was on the dole most of the time.
If success had come along when I was 17 it would either have killed me or sent me completely mad.
Traditionally, lots of vagrants and unemployable characters wind up working in kitchens.
Boredom or being sick of what you've done before is a big part of being in a band.
People's musical tastes are fickle, and music can be a fashion.
I think in the world of indie music there's this sort of false modesty.
Maybe 'Can't Stop Feeling' and 'Turn It On' we'll just release as singles. It's a thing The Beatles used to do which I really loved, the idea of releasing something as a single completely on its own.
If I was a fan of someone as a teenager, then it's OK for me to feel completely in awe when I meet them.
A lot of food criticism has a similar flavor to it, and I'm probably going to write about it in a different way.
I'd rather eat a cow-pat on a bun than a bloody McDonalds.
I'm not a food critic, and I'm not really an authority to write anything on food.
Men behave very oddly in the company of attractive women.
Just because you can leap off a drum kit doing a scissors kick while hitting a chord, people expect you to be an extrovert socially. But I'm not always comfortable with the idea of small talk at a party.
Surely every band wants to be a pivotal point in history.
Ideally, musicians belong outside the Establishment. When they cross that line, it's like something in them has died.
No matter what you do, if you're trying to create something new, your environment has a massive impact on you.
Glasgow's not a media center. When you're there, when you're hanging about, you feel quite detached from musical movements or fashions or anything like that. You do feel quite alone, in a good way.
Although they might not admit it, I think girls are very aware of the impact that they're having. But they never feel it themselves, and it's impossible to explain. It's like trying to tell a blind person what yellow is.
Being in a band didn't buy me my beans on toast!
Cinema, which is influenced by every single part of life, is direct and reaches you immediately. And writing - the best writing is complex ideas communicated concisely. And music - if it's a good tune, make sure people can bloody hear it.
Why play a chord when you can play one note?
You really only understand whether a song's good or not when you properly play it out in public for the first time.
The internet is like a gossipy girls' locker room after school, isn't it?
There are loads of bands I'd love to produce.
There's a difference between expectations and aspirations.
A lot of bands have the enthusiasm kicked out of them by playing really dreary pub venues that just churn bands through.
I want to make music that will make the blood surge in your veins, music that will get people up and dance.
You can only begin to be great when you embrace a sense of your own ridiculousness.
Ambition is sneered at by some bands. It seems like a pretty good thing to me.