Words matter. These are the best Tiffany Darwish Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I am an old soul: I do know so much about music history.
The writing process really became natural when it was real and from my heart, and I was exposed.
I’ve always loved country music.
The reality of a long-term career is that there are ups and downs.
To just to get up on stage and sing every night at 9 or 10 years old was unbelievable to me. It wasn’t that I was getting paid; it was that I was getting paid to do what I like to do.
I’m thankful for what I’ve got, but I’m cramming all my money into a trust fund because I don’t ever want to look around and wonder where all my money went.
For the kid in me that had a rockier edge and wanted to be Stevie Nicks, it’s been fulfilling that I’ve met Dave Navarro and Dave Grohl, these amazing artists that have given encouragement.
The first album, I’d had some input, but I was 14 years old then, and I really didn’t know what I was talking about.
My parents were divorced when I was 2, so I don’t remember much about them being together.
With ‘A Million Miles,’ I still was proving myself as a writer and as a vocalist. It gave me the platform to tour again.
Family is family, but sometimes they do hurt you. They don’t mean to, but they can, and sometimes you have to fend for yourself.
There were just a lot of things that happened between my mother and I, and I thought it would be easier if I lived with my grandmother.
It’s annoying when people go, ‘I didn’t know you could actually sing.’
I want to take acting lessons first. But I’d love to find the right film, a ‘Breakfast Club’ kind of thing.
To just be able to sing and show off the chops is kind of why I got into the music industry.
People do think I was a one-hit wonder, that I’m maybe not the kind of singer that I can really be – that impression is there. I have to work really hard to break down those walls.
I wanted to be the country version of Stevie Nicks, but before you knew it, I was heading in a pop direction, touring the world, having No. 1 singles, and loving every minute of it.
Looking back at old-school pictures, I never had a hair or makeup person. I wasn’t required to wear a lot of hair and makeup. I was never really allowed to do that because it was the image.
For a lot of people, I will always be the mall girl, and that’s OK. That was my start. But I can do so much more than that.
I took being a mom very seriously.
It was one of the things that used to be on my rider when I would do my shows. I would always ask for a Klondike bar.
My mum really depended on me. I’m the eldest of three girls, and she had emotional issues.
Singing pop music was not something I planned, but I managed to do it.
I grew up on the West Coast during the ’80s. But I wasn’t a ‘valley girl,’ since I grew up in Norwalk, which was filled with Latina girls.
I love everything by Led Zeppelin.
I’ve been married most of my life.
Because my early music was heavily produced, people assume my voice was also heavily produced.
I’d still rather be singing on stage than doing anything else.
There was a lot of turmoil in my family.
If it’s going to make you happy, go for it – life is short.
Like, it’s fun for me to sing ‘I Think We’re Alone Now.’ But when ‘Could’ve Been’ comes out as a single, that’s a ballad and really shows my voice; then people will say, ‘Hey, this girl really can sing.’
I think, with everything in my career, I don’t really want to put boundaries on myself.
I don’t need a security guy pushing my fans around.
When I was growing up, I wanted to dress like a lot of my idols, but I simply couldn’t afford it, or my mother would say, ‘Too much make-up’ or ‘It’s too old for you.’ So all I’ve ever worried about is that my fans could relate to me, and as a teenager with the same tastes and interests.
I like show business – performing. I can’t think of anything better.
What I’m hoping is that people in my age group will grow up with me and keep listening.
My family didn’t come from fame. No one was musical in my family except for me.
It was Stevie Nicks who made the biggest impression and really resonated with me. I found her intriguing and liked her voice. Her songs were kind of mysterious, and she was a woman in a rock band.
I guess getting used to sleeping on the tour bus has been the hardest thing – that and settling for whatever food you can get on the road.
I went to Nashville when I was 10. Tried to get a record deal. Everybody was like, ‘You’re 10. It’s not gonna happen. Come back later.’
I think of God as, well, sort of a friend or something I need. Like the way I need my fans.
I’ve got to overcome that tendency to hide what I write or throw it away.
I toured all over the world, I have die-hard fans, and I had my dreams come true.
I pinch myself daily.