Words matter. These are the best Nightclubs Quotes from famous people such as David Guetta, Kenneth Cole, Salman Rushdie, J. J. Cale, Norman Granz, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
My parents were extreme left so everything was against the system. I was walking barefoot in the streets of Paris when I was eight. When I started to DJ they hated it, because for them, nightclubs, and all of this life, was terrible and fake.
When I was younger I would often go to nightclubs and sit in the best-lit corner to look at what people chose to wear, or I’d go out and around the city – to places where people express their sense of what they think looks good. So, I get a sense of that, and then I try to interpret it.
Actually, I don’t even like parties. I would much prefer a room with four friends who sit around and have dinner. I detest nightclubs. And I don’t like places where the noise is so loud you can’t talk to people.
I played a lot of nightclubs in and around Tulsa till I was about 22, 24 years old, then I started travellin’ around.
Ella can work nightclubs that Duke might not be able to work, because of having the big band. Where they go now is strictly a matter of their own names and talents.
I can only imagine there still have to be nightclubs where 21-year-olds go.
When I used to play nightclubs, you had to play Top 40 or favorite oldies that maybe people could relate to.
Gay nightclubs offer better dance music.
I get to work a lot of times in nightclubs and large theaters, so I wanted to make music that is fun to perform in those settings. But I also wanted to contrast it with really serious, sincere ballads.
It was when I met everybody on ‘The Perfect Score’ that, like, nightclubs became a thing.
I was welcomed into some nightclubs in Chicago that no white man’s ever been in.
So I’m in my 51st year of playin’ mostly nightclubs. I do some concerts.
The fact that I’m often pushing my voice as hard as I can is from playing in nightclubs in Albuquerque where you don’t have a good sound system.
I don’t go out anywhere. I don’t go to nightclubs, so meeting somebody in the nightclub is out of question.
I was going to do business studies in Newcastle because there were a lot of nightclubs. My father said if I went that route, he’d never speak to me again: credit where credit’s due.
When I was young, all I wanted to do was go to nightclubs, drink, have fun and be unproductive.
Once I got to be about twenty-five, I got interested in the music of the time. I started smokin’ dope, I started drinking, I started slowing down and trying to find myself. I didn’t want to work in nightclubs.
I think the most surprising thing about the Olympics would be the amount of interaction and partying that goes on behind the scenes. They have nightclubs at the Olympic Village. It’s like college all over again.
As long as the Palestinians send terrorists onto school buses and to nightclubs to blow up people, Israel has no choice but to build the fence.
After college, rather than pursue real work, I joined a folk group and sang in coffee houses and nightclubs, an occupation that does little for the intellect and even less for the complexion.
We played nightclubs for seven years solid before we got a record deal, and then ‘Cowboys From Hell’ and ‘Vulgar Display Of Power,’ we toured non-stop four years for those records, and we developed the most brutal, loyal fan base on the face of the earth.
My twenties were painful. You had to go out to nightclubs. I love not having to pretend to enjoy those things anymore.
I hate nightclubs, and I get fed up very quickly in crowded rooms. I enjoy being around people I know.
We’re never really spotted falling out of nightclubs. We don’t go to places where there are photographers hanging out.
If hotels are replacing nightclubs, then they’re replacing nightclubs for yuppies.
And I’d spent 20 years in bars and nightclubs, dealing with promoters and getting ripped off and just everything that comes with all that stuff – paying your dues, I guess.
My dad is a singer. He used to sing in nightclubs, or pizza joints.
I have always hated nightclubs, and don’t like loud music.
I love the mix of people who hang out at nightclubs now. Their individuality is an inspiration to me. The music they listen to, the clothes they wear and the way they wear them defines a street style that I love.
My behaviour in the past wasn’t too bad. But let’s say it was not in keeping with the Islamic faith’s demands. Nightclubs, for example. People tell me it’s not a big deal if I go to them – but I don’t do it any more.