Words matter. These are the best Julia Michaels Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I definitely always thought of myself as a songwriter before a singer.
Women often don’t want to be typecast as the girl that’s sad.
People are going to assume whatever they want to assume.
Once I heard how deep music could touch people and what it can make you feel and all of these emotions it could bring out, I was really fascinated with it all.
When you start to have success, people look at you differently and expect more from you. With that comes a lot of pressure to perform, so it can be a little overwhelming.
It’s 2016. Men are more vulnerable than ever.
My boyfriend and I like to fight a lot. I have a lot of problems. He has a lot of problems. Somehow, we always work them out and find a way back to each other.
Stylistically, things are becoming cooler. People are trying different things and combining genres.
For the first three years, when I was writing, I was doing sessions with a whole bunch of different people all the time every day until I met Lindy Robbins, who kind of mentored me. And then, once you find that, all the pieces come together.
I’m very emotional and vulnerable.
I’m a very stimulated person.
I just remember really loving words and writing about anything I could, and the way I’d remember things, like my library card number, was to make a melody.
I just want to write fun, interesting music that pushes boundaries and is still true to myself. I want people to feel something.
If I get writer’s block – this is going to sound funny – I take a shower. Something about the water feels like I’m cleaning my brain as well as my body.
It never feels like work. I get to go to the studio and be with my friends every day and write new things and experiment with new sounds. We just have a blast.
If you listen to the radio, it’s all men who are emotional and women who are sexual. There’s nothing wrong with that! It definitely should be the case, but it makes me sad that women are afraid to be emotional because it makes them look weak.
Hula-hooping. It makes me feel free. My stepsister introduced me to it. I used to have panic attacks all the time, and she hula-hooped to cope with her own anxiety.
I just wanted to write the songs. I never wanted to sing them.
There is so much power in vulnerability, and I am proud to be that typecast.
I’ve been the person who hides behind people and lets everyone else do their thing, and I’ve been content there.
I grew up in Davenport, Iowa, but I moved to Santa Clarita, California, when I was 6.
I think that women are afraid to be vulnerable because they think it makes them look weak.
My sister was the singer, and I always had the mentality there could only be one in the family.
Working with new people can be really hard and nerve-wracking. When you don’t know the person, it’s like being on a blind date.
My favorite food is hot Cheetos. I could eat those every day.
An artist could have a really big relationship, and then they break up, and any song after that, people are automatically going to assume that that song is about that person.
I think artists are aware that talking gives a songwriter so much material. If they just tell us what’s happening, it’s so much easier for us to write a song that’s specific to them.
It’s ingrained in people’s minds that it’s a typecast and a stereotype that women are just emotional and crazy.
I’ve written poetry most of my life.
I’ve always been a writer. I’ve always loved words, ever since I was a kid.