52 Mind-Blowing Quotes By George Ivan Morrison

I deliberately try not to cater for the commercial market, so I can't see myself in competition, you know, with second or third generation rock stars.

A lot of people who were writing when I came through originally as a singer-songwriter have disappeared.

I am about the arrangements and the layers of depth in the music.

My records do not require a lot of thought of 'What is this?' and 'What is that?' That would be too contrived for me.

I put out records to this day that are not necessarily in a sequence of anything. Some could be written a while back, some not. There is no set pattern.

My thinking musically has always been more advanced - it is difficult to get it down onto paper sometimes, even now.

For a long time, I couldn't actually deal with playing concerts; it was a totally alien concept to me, 'cause I was used to playing in clubs and dance halls.

You learn to read the audiences after a while, and there are all different kinds of gigs.

I don't feel comfortable doing interviews. My profession is music, and writing songs. That's what I do. I like to do it, but I hate to talk about it.

I write songs. Then, I record them. And, later, maybe I perform them on stage. That's what I do. That's my job. Simple.

Being famous was extremely disappointing for me. When I became famous it was a complete drag and it is still a complete drag.

As a developing musician, skiffle became a platform for me to start playing music.

Even today, skiffle is a defining part of my music. If I get the opportunity to just have a jam, skiffle is what I love to play.

Every performance is different. That's the beauty of it.

I do see value in music criticism. Most of the criticism I have received over the years has been very good.

I don't think nostalgia has to be negative.

I educated myself. To me, school was boring.

I learnt from Armstrong on the early recordings that you never sang a song the same way twice.

I never bought the commercial thing, at any stage of the game.

I never paid attention to what was contemporary or what was commercial, it didn't mean anything to me.

I think Paul McGuinness and U2 created the Irish music industry. It certainly wasn't there before that.

I understood jazz, I understood how it worked. That's what I apply to everything.

I'd love to live in Ireland but I'd like to live as me, not what someone thinks I am. People don't understand - I lived there before I was famous.

I'm not a rock singer and I don't want to be a rock singer. I'm not interested. It doesn't seem to get across.

If you're a pop singer, you don't need to evolve. You just get a set together, have some hit songs and play them over and over.

It was really strange for me when I started to play concerts in America where the audiences were all sitting down.

Large audiences did not suit my low-key approach.

My ambition when I started out was to play two or three gigs a week. And that's what I'm doing.

Skiffle was a name that was attached to what was, in essence, American folk music with a beat.

The first piece of music that captured my imagination was probably Ray Charles Live At Newport.