38 Great Quotes By Michael Stipe That Will Cheer You Up
I'm not homosexual, I'm not heterosexual, I'm just sexual.
Death is pretty final./I'm collecting vinyl./I'm gonna DJ at the end of the world/'cause if heaven does exists/with a kickin' playlist/I don't wanna miss it at the end of the world
I've always felt that sexuality is a really slippery thing. In this day and age, it tends to get categorized and labeled, and I think labels are for food. Canned food.
My feeling is that labels are for canned food... I am what I am - and I know what I am.
Here's a truck stop instead of St. Peter's.
When I get really hammered I take my clothes off. That's a sure sign. It's been a long time since the last time I did that. Probably a year.
I think there were early critics who wanted us to change the world because the Sex Pistols failed.
On planes I always cry. Something about altitude, the lack of oxygen and the bad movies. I cried over a St. Bernard movie once on a plane. That was really embarrassing.
Who will tend the farm museums who will dust the day belongings?
If I'm tired of me, I'm sure the public is as well.
I'm just not that fascinating a person to have had all those lives that I've written about.
Peter was sick of being a pop star, the guitar god, and so he decided to teach himself other instruments. Among the instruments that he picked up was the mandolin.
We toured that record for a year, which turned out to be the culmination of ten years of being constantly on the road. We were sick to death of touring.
There was never a golden era of American radio as far as I can tell.
And I don't expect anyone can bring about a revolution in the way that Bob Dylan did - and really didn't - in the 1960s.
There are people that very strongly identify themselves as gay and then lesbian, and then I think there are a lot of people who are kind of some percentage or some version of that.
I really wanted to be on Six Feet Under as a corpse. That would be hysterical.
I went through a period where I was really tired of seeing and reading about myself.
So, we went from being an Athens band to being a Georgia band to being a Southern band to being an American band from the East Coast to being an American band and now we're kind of an international phenomenon.
If you disagree with me, fine! Because that's the great thing about America, we can disagree!
Because the casual music listeners are the ones who turn on the radio and they don't really care what's playing, they just know that they kinda like it or it's easy to drive to or it's easy to sing along to or whatever.
There was a point in the '80s when I looked out at my audience and I saw people that - were I not on the stage - they'd sooner slug me as they walked by me on the sidewalk. And I realized that I was way beyond the choir.
When we first started, we were a band from Athens and that was so off the map.
My iPod that was programmed by Peter Buck. It has 7,000 songs hand-picked for me by him.
I'm tired of being this solemn poet of the masses, the enigma shrouded in a mystery.
They always want me to play myself and that's a big snooze.
Super casual music listeners. That's most of the people in the world. And you have to understand, that's why Top 40 radio exists. It's not there for people who seek out music and who love music.
When you meet a stranger, look at his shoes. Keep your money in your shoes.
Never eat broccoli when there are cameras around.
Sometimes before we make a record I go back and listen to a few. It's equally humbling and uplifting.