Nile Rodgers quotes:

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  • If I could live in one city and do every single thing I do there, I would choose Venice. You can't turn your head without seeing something amazing.

  • The only person I have regrets about is Miles Davis. He and I had become good friends after we did a photo shoot, and coincidentally, we kept running into each other at parties and stuff. I regret not having written a hit for Miles Davis.

  • Almost all the producers I know and dig, like Quincy Jones or Brian Eno, are really musicians first. I'm a composer, an orchestrator, an arranger and a musician first. I know how to write and rewrite songs, and the genius is really in the rewriting.

  • What do great artists do when you see a world around you that's in turmoil? Some of the best artists make you feel good (hah), they look to the future.

  • Bands always call me when they are in need of a boost and I come in and put them back on top.

  • I used to play flute and clarinet at school, and although I wasn't thinking about making a living or getting a pay cheque, I already knew I was going to play music all my life.

  • When I was very young, there was a lot of music at home, mostly jazz. I was walking around singing and pretending I was in bands from a very young age. But the first song that was really personal to me was 'Blue Suede Shoes'.

  • In today's world, I probably would like to work with someone like Gaga,

  • I was a fan of the Marx Brothers. One of them had this character where he pretended not to be able to talk, but then he wrote this autobiography called 'Harpo Speaks!' He wrote about how he quit school at nine years old to become a professional.

  • When I go on vacation, I take very few clothes and a whole lot of books. It's the most soothing thing in the world. Reading 'Moby-Dick' is like being in a time machine. I almost feel as excited as the first time I read it and I always find something new.

  • With Sumthin Else Music Works, I wanted to spread the love and give newcomers a chance to make it because something that really helped me were all the people who had given me an opportunity when I was putting my career together.

  • I've found great solace in finally taking care of myself and others.

  • Art is something that opens up and enhances your emotions and that's what I like to think I'm doing.

  • It feels like my job is to support people. I support great artists. When I worked with a symphony, I sat in the third chair, not the first chair.

  • After waiting four long years since the Lost CHIC Tapes were recovered, I'm finally putting out our first record. I'm like a child waiting for Christmas morning.

  • Nobody under the sun was like Madonna. She was positive and clear and wholly dedicated to achieving everything that she's achieved.

  • My childhood was bittersweet in many ways. We moved around a lot. By the time I was 10, I had travelled thousands of miles, often on my own. My parents were like my friends, so it felt like I didn't really have parents at all. But in a crazy way that was very liberating. It forced me to be independent, maybe a leader, and certainly a survivor.

  • Music is the one part of the entertainment business where you can't fool anybody into buying a record.

  • When people tell you you're on the brink of death, you've got to dig pretty deep to get it together.

  • My concept is, until you absolutely know the plane is crashing, there's no reason to be afraid. All the turbulence in the world does not mean the plane is crashing. Once it's confirmed, then you can be afraid.

  • I am very rich because of 'Chic' - artistically as well as spiritually. It's been an amazing life.

  • I grew as close to Madonna as I've ever been to a woman without being romantically involved.

  • It was actually my partner, Bernard Edwards, who helped me develop my sort of funky jazz style.

  • I called all adults by their first names, and my mum was just another adult. I was the firstborn of my generation in the family, but because I was so close to my parents in age, they treated me with a kind of adult respect. They talked to me as an equal.

  • If something is worth doing, it's worth overdoing.

  • I've had insomnia since I was five years old. I just don't require much sleep. I'm never tired.

  • I grew up in the era of the concept album. What I do now is pick up on singles, and they are their own complete stories; you don't necessarily have to hear the rest of the album because I don't think albums are created like that anymore. They get songs from all over the place.

  • There's been this strange irony to my whole life. All my original bandmates have died, when I was the most wild and most reckless of us all. But I'm still here.

  • I'm a record producer and songwriter; I'm a problem-solver.

  • I've never cancelled any public appearance, simply because that's what my life is; it's doing my work, and I never want to stop doing my work unless it becomes impossible for me to do it.

  • I'm always swimming forward like a shark. You just keep going and you don't rest. I love waking up knowing that I have a problem to solve.

  • I would play hooky from school and spend all day in the movie theaters. Consequently, I learned satire in all its subtle forms.

  • I think the hardest thing to overcome is judging yourself and being your own worst critic so to speak.

  • I love Madonna! If you want to see the Madonna I know, just go on YouTube and you'll see those early interviews before the record came out. She was giddy and wonderful and giggly and happy and so excited looking towards the future.

  • Art, well good art at least, takes you to a place you go during the experience of it, and then after you experience it you are different.

  • I don't believe in the philosophy of stumbling across hit records.

  • Everything about my life was culturally rich, and all the people I met sort of reinforced the wackiness that was normally inside of me. No one said, 'You can't do that,' until I got to real record companies, that is.

  • Every record I have done was because I was a person's friend. The only time we did not continue to be friends was if the record did not become a hit. If it did, we became great friends.

  • Any real record person knows that the number one most powerful marketing tool when it comes to music is repetition.

  • Artists don't come much cooler and well rounded than Lady Gaga. Love and respect.

  • I really do love pop. I understand songwriting, I understand the business, and I'm not stuck in any one particular time period.

  • I'd probably be a super wealthy guy if I had sat around writing songs and getting them placed like everyone else I know. But I write songs about people or after I meet them and they're somewhat biographical - they're fiction but also non-fiction.

  • I've been able to be a part of every movement in music over the last several decades. The only one that I haven't been involved in so much is hip-hop, which I chose not to be involved in because it felt like I would be what they called "perpetrating." It felt like hip-hop was so much of its own culture and that I was not part of that culture.

  • The only person I have regrets about is Miles Davis. He and I had become good friends after we did a photo shoot and coincidentally we kept running into each other at parties and stuff. I regret not having written a hit for Miles Davis.

  • You can fool a person into going to see a movie with a good trailer.

  • You can't be afraid until you have no other option but to be afraid.

  • Trust me, the only real way to understand 'Chic' is in highfalutin terms. Our chord progressions were based on European modal melodies. I made those early 'Chic' records to impress my jazz friends.

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