Words matter. These are the best Touch People Quotes from famous people such as LL Cool J, George Grove, Sylvie Guillem, Julia Michaels, Tyler Farr, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I’m a real person that cares about his art and cares about what he’s doing. I have a heart and a soul and I want to touch people and give.
Our songs touch people, and take them back to a time when there was no threat of terrorism, when you didn’t have to lock your doors and when Mom and Dad took care of everything.
Dance should touch people.
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.
There’s certain songs that you’re gonna record that you hope to touch people and change lives, and there’s certain songs that you know that are not going to be that serious.
I tried so hard with movies like Vertigo and Middle of the Night and others. I felt those would show me that it’s only a matter of time before I’d find the right one to reach out and touch people.
Whenever you write music, you want it to touch people on a certain level. I mean, I’ve been reading tweets about ‘Troublemaker’ and people saying ‘OMG, I can so relate to this – this is a guy that I fancy, or a girl that I fancy; it’s exactly like this person.’
I thought to myself, there’s a man who gave up his life to serve others – to touch people in that way is probably the greatest thing you can do as a human being.
Every writer dreams of writing a book that will touch people.
As athletes, it’s our responsibility to help. It’s easy for us to go out and affect people’s lives in so many different ways. We don’t even know how much we can touch people and change the direction of somebody’s future.
You’ve gotta really touch people to move them to buy your records.
I do gravitate towards the sad songs because I find them to be more of a challenge for me from a writing perspective. There are things about those songs that do touch people in a way that a fun song can’t.
My mother taught me to be honest, to be selfless, and to touch people in a positive way.
I’m just glad to be singing songs that touch people.
These technologies can make life easier, can let us touch people we might not otherwise. You may have a child with a birth defect and be able to get in touch with other parents and support groups, get medical information, the latest experimental drugs. These things can profoundly influence life. I’m not downplaying that.
We saw very little of the real Jack Buck behind the microphone. He would touch people in ways that we will never know. Jack was much more than just an announcer.
As an artist, I never want to be a moment. I want to be a legacy, and I want my music to touch people for years to come.
I don’t want to be super serious but I want to have fun with my platform. I want to touch people, I want to be relatable and let girls know that you can go to college and still pursue what you want after that.
Our actions – and inaction – touch people we may never know and never meet across the globe.
Some shows just go away – and that’s fine. They serve their purpose and their entertainment value, but there are shows that touch people in different ways and that they remember.
The reason I play music is to touch people – for selfish reasons, as well. It feels good to make someone else feel something, whether it’s a kiss, a painting, good idea or it’s a song.
I am a real person that cares about his art and cares about what he’s doing – I have a heart and a soul and want to touch people and give.
The ability to touch people and literally change lives is incredibly relevant in a consumer-products company.
If I read a part and think I can connect to it, that I can touch people with it, I will do it, no matter what its size. And if I think I can’t do something with a part, I won’t take it.
I think books, novels and autobiographies have a power to touch people far more personally than films do, so there’s a bit more of a responsibility when you then dramatise it.
I love touching. I always touch people.
When I was 11, I developed a new symptom – the worst one yet: I had to touch people before I talked to them. When I say ‘had to,’ that’s exactly what I mean: if I didn’t touch them first, I literally couldn’t form the words.
I think that talking about the personal specificity, personal details, is how you get the big, big audiences – by talking about your relationships or your personal tragedies. If you reach out with that energy, you’ll touch people.
As a songwriter, if you can touch people and make them feel a little less alone in the world, then you’ve done your job.
I want to touch people with the music and help them through whatever they’re going through. That’s what music’s there for – making people happy.
It would be really great if our music continues to touch people. Once your heart is moved, it will develop to something better and positive.
I wish people would turn off their computers, go outside, talk to people, touch people, lick people, enjoy each other’s company and smell each other on the rump.
Fashion has always had the ability to affect lives, to touch people. But for the longest period of time, we’ve said, ‘Oh, we’re just pages of a magazine; that’s what we all look at.’ It’s more than that.