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High School Is Life’s Way of Giving You a Record Low to Judge the Rest of Your Life By)

The easy way is efficacious and speedy, the hard way arduous and long. But, as the clock ticks, the easy way becomes harder and the hard way becomes easier. And as the calendar records the years, it becomes increasingly evident that the easy way rests hazardously upon shifting sands, whereas the hard way builds solidly a foundation of confidence that cannot be swept away.

Actually I was writing with people that didn't get records.

I wasted my substance, I know I did, on riotous living, so I did, but there's nothing on record to show I did more than my betters have done.

Each time I write, each time the authentic words break through, I am changed. The older order that I was collapses and dies. I lose control. I do not know exactly what words will appear on the page. I follow language. I follow the sound of the words, and I am surprised and transformed by what I record.

Look at music for what it's worth around the world and not just America. In other countries, people are still buying CDs and going to record stores. But in America, it's all about digital. The game is breaking down. But, look at me, you need to know how to play the game the right way.

I learned how to take other people's mechanisms of promoting their stuff through me as opposed to promoting my own stuff, as far as getting Snoop DeVilles, SnoopDeGrills, Snoop Doggy Dogg biscuits, Snoop Dogg record label, Snoop Dogg bubble gum, Snoop Youth Football League.

I love making music and I'm falling in love with making records, so it's like having two girlfriends. But I can handle it.

We live in what's called an open society, which of course means they open our emails, open our phone records, and open our medical records.

The poet's voice need not merely be the record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail.

It's what's on the record not what labels on it. You know, that's like getting a box of cornflakes and eating the cardboard.

There’s nothing as glamorous to me as a record store.

Record stores are the backbone of the recorded music culture. It's where we go to network, browse around, and find new songs to love. The stores whose staff live for music have spread the word about exciting new things faster and with more essence than either radio or the press. Any artist that doesn't support the wonderful ma and pa record stores across America is contributing to our own extinction.

Immersing yourself in the environment of a real record store where music is celebrated and cherished adds real value to the experience of buying music. In some ways, that retail experience is as important as the music.

I often say to people that producing is the best paid form of cowardice. When you produce things you almost always get credit, if it's a good record, but you hardly ever get the blame if it's not! You don't really take responsibility for your work.

Today, people are more into the glitz and the glamour of everything. We don't even read the inside of records anymore.

Rick Perry is the perfect candidate for those who thought George W. Bush was just too dang cerebral. And Adios, Mofo is the perfect guide to his record, his rhetoric and his remarkable hair. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll vote.

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.

Nothing records the effects of a sad life so graphically as the human body.

I'm developing artists for my new record label, my son's band, Intangible, being one of them.

Artists were nurtured back in the '70s. Their music was developed by the record companies.

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