Robin Pecknold quotes
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“I was raised up believing I was somehow unique...”
-- Robin PecknoldSource : "Song: "Helplessness Blues" ("Helplessness Blues")". May 3, 2011.
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“The notes sound like they're coming from inside your mind... It was the closest thing to a psychedelic experience I've ever had.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“Fleet Foxes will never, ever, under no circumstances, from now until the world chokes on gas fumes, sign to a major label. This includes all subsidiaries or permutations thereunder. Till we die.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I don't really hang out with anyone. I'll hang out with my band ... but I don't have any friends aside from that.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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“I'm looking forward to doing things more intuitively in the future, just going with whatever happens and not immediately categorizing it as potentially good or bad or original or whatever.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“At the end of the day, for people in this position, you just need to make something that feels like you're expressing yourself honestly, something that you'd want to listen to. The rest of the aesthetic is kind of bullshit, and I don't mean that in a negative way - just that it's a choice.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“Speaking for myself I have influenced with lots of John Coltrane, Van Morrison, Joanna Newsom, Mississippi Records compilations, Simon & Garfunkel, Duncan Browne, Judee Sill, Sublime Frequencies releases, Ali Farka Touré, John Fahey, Flower Travellin' Band, Sagittarius, Toumani Diabaté, Philip Glass, lots of different stuff.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“The lyrics to me are a result of the emotional and creative climate present while making the record as well as personally going through a sort of mid-twenties stock-taking.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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“I think that's becoming more and more of a priority, letting other aspects of life take precedent over making music, or just approaching the whole thing more holistically.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“Every time you pick up an instrument, it's not always out of necessity - for a certain kind of person, it's a choice.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“You want to think about certain styles of music as being reflective of a certain culture or a certain time or a point of view. You don't want it to be just an intellectual exercise.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I don't know that we're really going to need a label for the things we're thinking about doing next.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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“The touring thing is such a huge time commitment. I'm really feeling like I want to start writing and recording music again. But I have to leave for tour tomorrow. That's kind of frustrating; at the end of the day, you're plugging into this lifestyle. It's the "band lifestyle," and that's weird! I would like for touring to be creative in its own right.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“You want to make music that reflects your ideals, but considering the isolating process of recording and the time and energy requirements of touring, there aren't a lot of opportunities to express those ideals anywhere but the music itself.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I like having the vinyl, but it's not like we're going to sell an umbrella or something. I don't like the idea of selling something that's not music - I mean, I like going to shows and buying the shirt, but beyond that, I don't know. There's a lot of crap in the world.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“Sometimes I do get writer's block but it's more of a writer's doubt - I'll try and write but nothing goes anywhere because I start thinking everything sucks.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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“A label is like a bank with all these really important relationships, and maybe an aesthetic or a point of view. But if you only want to release two songs, you don't need the guy who can talk to all the retailers, because they're not going to stock two songs.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I've thought about doing a subscription service, where people pre-pay and then we send them 12"s as they're finished, with one song on each side. That would be really fun. But we'll need a significant time off from touring to be able to fulfill that.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I was listening to this Ngozi Family record, 45,000 Volts, and it's mostly this guy singing, and then for the choruses, he's doubled. And it's not even harmonized, it's all the same note! And I'm like, "Oh, that sounds epic." I don't know, it's just one of those arbitrary taste things.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“We're covering all our bases so we can do whatever we want next time. That's how we're looking at it, rather than this just being an endless number of album/tour cycles.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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“I only write maybe one or two songs every couple of years that I think are good enough to play alone without other stuff happening.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“I do read the records reviews but more out of curiosity than anything else, I feel like we know what we want to do next time regardless of how this one is received, good or bad, so it won't really make much of a difference, which wasn't the case on the first album, where both the positive and negative criticism or reactions did catch us off guard and inevitably colored the creation of this one.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“The simpler songs are just done when the lyric has been stated; the more complex or band-oriented stuff can go in a million directions.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
“Being in Portland is cool. I have some good friends here and the general feeling might be a little more welcoming.”
-- Robin Pecknold -
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