Words matter. These are the best Charley Pride Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Any entertainer who tells you that the adoration of fans is not a heady experience probably never had the experience.
When I came up, there was room for the new and the old. For every new artist, an old one didn’t have to be pushed out.
It used to be that if you had a pretty good record, you could stop by a station in Little Rock or Atlanta and let the DJ listen to it. No way something like that can happen now.
Redd Foxx was the same gruff old codger you saw on television.
Even now, when I’m asked how I’m doing, I like to reply, ‘Pretty good. I’ve got all my fingers and both eyes.
For most entertainers, there is a single experience, one defining moment, when confidence replaces the self-doubt that most of us wrestle with.
Performing is an experience, for me, that is as humbling as it is energizing.
A black man singing about a blond girl was potential trouble.
What qualifies me to tell people how to act or what to think? I’m Charley Pride, country singer. Period.
I learned to tune a guitar by ear. That method has served me pretty well.
Singing as a full-time job was not something I had given a lot of thought to and I had no clear notion of the money to be made in it.
What we don’t need in country music is divisiveness, public criticism of each other, and some arbitrary judgement of what belongs and what doesn’t.
Once your name becomes well known, politicians come courting.
I grew up not liking my father very much. I never saw him cry. But he must have. Everybody cries.
It isn’t reasonable to expect that everyone in the world is a country music fan. Not yet, anyway.
I think there’s enough room in country music for everybody.
Fans are what make a performer and I’ve always taken them seriously.
The time I spent thinking about how I was better than somebody else or worrying about somebody else’s attitude was time I could put to better use.
Fans will praise you, scold you, and offer helpful advice. Fans will also defend you.
Too many religious organizations are in the business of enforcing beliefs.
A fan will grab you and hug you and will not let go. When that happens, you wish it could be that way all over the world.
I’ve tried to help a lot of young artists get started.
Until MTV, television had not been a huge influence on music. To compete with MTV, the country music moguls felt they had to appeal to the same young audience and do it the way MTV did.
In 20 years I had sold more records for RCA than any artist except Elvis Presley.
I don’t care what the religion is called; as far as I’m concerned, one God, the God I adhere to, is in charge of all of them.