Top 25 Gin Wigmore Quotes

Words matter. These are the best Gin Wigmore Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

It's easy listening to a record, but a live performance

It’s easy listening to a record, but a live performance is so personal and real.
Gin Wigmore
I want a long career in music, so you’ve gotta keep trying things out; it’s gotta get progressively better.
Gin Wigmore
You can’t go round looking like a rag.
Gin Wigmore
I don’t think I’m a good-enough songwriter.
Gin Wigmore
I’ve lived a lot since I was 16, so I’ve got more things to write about. I’ve started playing around the world and met some great people along the way who’ve taught me lots of things.
Gin Wigmore
I’m getting all domesticated. I feel like Susie the homemaker.
Gin Wigmore
You break up, and you say something pathetic, or you don’t even speak at all when someone’s telling you they don’t love you anymore. But then you think about it five minutes later, and you have all these great comebacks!
Gin Wigmore
I got down to business and started writing furiously. I wore my fingers down to a callous state writing with every Tom, Dick and Harry around the world, including a chap named Charlie who plays for a man named Bob, to wrestle my emotions and bring out the raw grit hiding in my tightly guarded sub-conscious.
Gin Wigmore
When you’re young, you need to be silly and be stupid and not be trying to do that when you’re 40 in a red sports car.
Gin Wigmore
No one can attack you when you’re songwriting; it’s you and a song, which is a great place to be.
Gin Wigmore
I’d say the key thing is to remain true to what originally got you into music. When I wrote ‘Hallelujah,’ it ignited me to do music because of the love and joy that I got from writing that song. Down the road, you get all of these opinions from people; just remember what got you started in the first place.
Gin Wigmore
I don’t think I’m a diva.
Gin Wigmore
I was in a band in Auckland, and I remember they all hated me. They had a big intervention. They said, basically, ‘Gin, we think you suck.’ I was miserable. I cried and cried. But looking back, that taught me about social skills and how to communicate with musicians.
Gin Wigmore
Honestly, Americans are more open-minded and have the patience and the time for new types of music. In Australia and New Zealand, you must earn your place.
Gin Wigmore
People might think I’m a bit more intimidating than I am.
Gin Wigmore
I want to let everyone hear my music and enjoy it, but just as long as it’s fun. I’ll go as far as until it gets too much like a day job.
Gin Wigmore
I’m not aiming to be someone like Christina Aguilera.
Gin Wigmore
I’ve got a very short attention span, and this has been part of the reason I’m so kind of dumbfounded at the fact that I’ve still stayed with music. Nothing has ever stuck for me, and music’s the only thing that’s managed to stick out for a long period of time.
Gin Wigmore
The beauty of being a musician is writing songs. That’s the best part. It’s therapeutic and honest and private.
Gin Wigmore
Being a black sheep is a way I would describe myself.
Gin Wigmore
I listened to John Denver and Simon & Garfunkel. Edith Piaf was a huge favourite. Then I discovered musicals – I loved ‘Les Miserables’ – and, at about 14, I started listening to David Gray.
Gin Wigmore
I’m just going to tour; that’s the best way for people to get to know me. Focusing on the international stuff and breaking in to the States and U.K.
Gin Wigmore
I love the energy in the U.S., you know. Everyone is really psyched. You feel really privileged to be there.
Gin Wigmore
I remember when I wrote songs when I was about 16, they all sounded the same because I didn’t know anything. And all the subject matter was all the same because I hadn’t actually done much.
Gin Wigmore
My dad dying was actually a reason for me to stop music properly for about a year, because he was a big supporter. All I wanted to do was write a song about him and, you know, when something’s too fresh, you can’t quite word it.
Gin Wigmore