Top 30 Roger McGuinn Quotes

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

I think the Internet is an awful lot like FM radio was

I think the Internet is an awful lot like FM radio was when it broke out in the late ’60s. It’s kind of a wild and wily kind of format. They could play 20 songs in a row that had the word ‘blue’ in them, or whatever they wanted to do.
Roger McGuinn
I don’t want to be an oldies act, kind of dragging around on the road just for the money.
Roger McGuinn
The wonderful thing about having your songs on the radio is that people are going to go out to your concerts and buy your merchandise and that sort of thing, and it feels good to get that level of name recognition.
Roger McGuinn
I’ve always considered myself a folk singer, even though we strapped on Rickenbacker guitars and played pretty loud.
Roger McGuinn
I love being on the sea and the rolling of the ship, and for me, it’s not really happening until we get a little wave action going, I love that feeling.
Roger McGuinn
Now, you can just get a laptop, get some software, put a microphone on it and make a record. You have to know how to do it. It does help if you’ve had 35 or 40 years of experience in the studio. But, it still levels the playing field so artists can record their own stuff.
Roger McGuinn
That’s my favorite subject because it really levels the playing field for artists these days. You don’t have to sell out to the record company. You don’t have to get a five hundred thousand dollars, or whatever, and pay them back for the rest of your life to record a record.
Roger McGuinn
I’ve got an electric little motorcycle that I go to the supermarket with every day, and it’s powered by the solar panels, so it’s really got a zero carbon footprint.
Roger McGuinn
I open all my concerts with ‘My Backpages,’ written by Bob Dylan, and close them all with ‘May the Road Rise to Meet You,’ written by Roger McGuinn and Camilla McGuinn.
Roger McGuinn
Once I’ve written a song, I sometimes refine them.
Roger McGuinn
Leadbelly’s guitar is in the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame.
Roger McGuinn
I don’t really collect guitars.
Roger McGuinn
I started playing guitar back in ’56. I was a teenager, and guitars had just come in, and I had a thing for it and got one. Started learning lead breaks from songs, because that was the easiest thing to do at the time. I had the guitar for two years before I learned any chords. Really.
Roger McGuinn
I love being a troubadour. I travel around the world with my wife and play little theaters. We have a ball.
Roger McGuinn
The original Byrds were very much Beatles-influenced, and then we gradually got our own sound. We started mixing things together more.
Roger McGuinn
I went to school for folk music back when I was a teenager and learned hundreds of songs.
Roger McGuinn
I’m happy with the Byrds as a good memory.
Roger McGuinn
One of my favorite albums is Bob Gibson and Bob Camp, ‘At the Gate of Horn.’ It was a really dynamic album, almost like The Beatles, and way before its time… around 1960 or so.
Roger McGuinn
But in my imagination this whole thing developed and I started mixing up old folk songs with the Beatles beat and taking them down to Greenwich Village and playing them for the people there.
Roger McGuinn
People have told me that other artists have been influenced by my music, and it’s flattering. It’s a wonderful thing.
Roger McGuinn
I think what makes the Byrds stand up all these years is the basis in folk music. Folk music, being a timeless art form, is the foundation of the Byrds. We were all from a folk background. We considered ourselves folk singers even when we strapped on electric instruments and dabbled in different things.
Roger McGuinn
I play a couple basic folks songs and break them down. I did that on a six string. I can’t recall all the songs on it. There’s some finger picking on it.
Roger McGuinn
I’d like to be remembered as a keeper of the flame who kept traditional music alive, because I’ve been doing that twice as long as I was in the Byrds.
Roger McGuinn
My favorite guitar now is my Martin HD-7 because it’s got everything. It’s got the jingle-jangle thing from the twelve string, it’s got the flexibility of the six string, and the bass notes where you can do bass runs and that sort of thing.
Roger McGuinn
No one realized that I needed eyeglasses until I was 12 years old. My parents were writers, so I was around the sounds of words and developed a vocabulary with my sense of hearing. I play guitar by ear.
Roger McGuinn
You can see it on the Internet: There’s an argument going on continually about, ‘What is folk music?’ And I don’t really want to get involved in that. It’s an endless argument, a ‘How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?’ kind of argument.
Roger McGuinn
The first 12-string guitar I bought was probably around 1957.
Roger McGuinn
I was raised a Roman Catholic and had to go to the eight o’clock Mass every morning and have communion and wear a tie, kind of like a restricted life style. Then in the ’60s, we got wild and let it go and started looking in other places to see where God really was, and I came back to the Christian thing.
Roger McGuinn
I think Wilco is going to definitely stand the test of time – no question – and Uncle Tupleo, and the whole No Depression scene, which is now alt-country. I think that’s going to be around a long time.
Roger McGuinn
Well, I guess that early 12 string. The first Martin I bought. I bought it around 1957 with money I earned as a janitor assistant. I bought brand new. I still have that.
Roger McGuinn