Zitat des Tages von Steve Forbert:
I just play, and I'm always trying to write songs.
You don't see a lot of difference between the Gin Blossoms and the Byrds.
I relate to the audiences and they know me. It's pretty real.
It's often said that life is strange. But compared to what?
I've had an advantage; I've had a sort of open public acceptance in New York that doesn't happen to just anyone trying to make the transition you were talking about.
I have ideas in mind, things that I'm working toward. There have to be goals; there has to be a challenge. Just playing, in and of itself, is great. But there has to be some motivation to it.
My priority doesn't lie with the whole website and Facebook and such; I'm still walking down the road in a pair of real shoes. You need to just play as much as you can. Get in front of people, as I've always said. It doesn't matter if it's ten people at an open mic or opening a show for someone. Play all the time.
There was just no way I could leave this little Martin guitar in my apartment overnight or even in the afternoon, and expect to find it there when I got back.
So I played the acoustic guitar and harmonica and stomped my foot and I think I was right in assuming that Greenwich Village would be the best place to perform my own material and possibly get some attention, move on to making records and all.
Folk-rock hasn't changed much over the decades since the Byrds started it.
I don't cringe when I think of doing old material. A lot of the people have been with me through the years.
I'm not trying to be the new anybody.
And the music, as far as a type of music, it's still pretty viable.
If something doesn't work, you have to admit it. Always try to find what's going right and what's going wrong with your music. If you can, pool your resources and record yourself; do that frequently.
I wouldn't be interested in just doing a show that's mapped out and choreographed with a set list. That would've been boring so long ago it just wouldn't be any fun.
It's not like making records is terrible. Still, I do find the writing of the songs and the live shows to be the things that give you the most clear picture of what it's all about.
I haven't had the most lucrative career. If I'm going to be completely honest, I'm a one-hit wonder.
I like getting requests from audience members.
You start to think in terms of making an album that might be greater than the sum of its parts. It's sort of like having a lot of footage and then editing it into something that will make sense to a viewer, you know. Sometimes it might involve even working on an older song that might complete that picture.
You have a song, and people know it. It's like a calling card for you.
I have a knack for writing tribute songs for people who will never know about them.