1.
I was kind of pathetic. That's what got me playing out in the street. I ran out of money and needed more gin for the night.
Frank Fairfield
2.
Some people are good cooks and some people are good... I don't see why you have to do all of that.
Frank Fairfield
3.
I don't care too much for thinking about the past. The truth is just another story. You can remember it any way you want; it's never gonna be the same twice.
Frank Fairfield
4.
I've been playing one way or another since I was about three years old. I don't remember not knowing how to play any instruments.
Frank Fairfield
5.
There's this food that's evolved over thousands of years and people have made their own kind of thing, but it's not art-food, yet. It can be, but it's just food. It's the thing that people do because they have to, because they need it. I feel music is one of those things, too.
Frank Fairfield
6.
I don't think music is an art any more than cooking food is an art.
Frank Fairfield
7.
Some guy is good at putting these verses together, and some guy is good at singing them. That's just the way it is.
Frank Fairfield
8.
I'm just a guy that sings songs because that's what he likes to do, I guess.
Frank Fairfield
9.
I wouldn't consider myself a songwriter at all. Maybe I piece together a certain little thing here and there, but songwriters are people who do this with sheet music.
Frank Fairfield
10.
I lived by a bay for a while, and I shucked oysters. Some packing things. You know, just whatever odd job you can find whenever you're moving around. I never really cared much for the franchise kind of work, so I'd try to find things that I considered to be a little more honorable.
Frank Fairfield
11.
I don't associate much with anybody. I'm not big on all the teachings and groups and being a part of something, I guess.
Frank Fairfield
12.
I was born or raised in the church, so I guess the first songs I would have played would have been church songs.
Frank Fairfield
13.
I just started playing music on the street and walking around with a fiddle, and I think that's kind of when I started being serious - or as serious as it's going to get.
Frank Fairfield
14.
I didn't have any intention of playing music for a living or anything like that. I was just not doing well in my head or whatever you call it and drinking too much.
Frank Fairfield
15.
I really enjoy playing music. I feel like it's something to try to give to people.
Frank Fairfield
16.
I play popular songs. This is not some obscure, unusual music. This is popular music.
Frank Fairfield
17.
For a while, it was something to try to push at people, playing old murder ballads and being upset about everything I was seeing around me. But now I feel a lot more at peace with it.
Frank Fairfield
18.
I think people like feeling miserable just as much as they like feeling happy.
Frank Fairfield
19.
I feel like there's the people's music, and there's corporate music.
Frank Fairfield
20.
No race or civilization of people are just going to say, "Oh, instead of using real meat, let's just mash up a bunch of lymph nodes and put a bunch of weird stuff in it and pack it up in plastic cans and plastic bins, and let's eat that way. That'll be great." People don't choose that.
Frank Fairfield
21.
Real music is what I consider to be uncorporatized music, the music that just happens. I feel like that's not a very well-known thing.
Frank Fairfield
22.
Because I have something to say doesn't mean everyone has to take it too seriously or get too upset that it rubs them the wrong way.
Frank Fairfield
23.
You have a history of art-music that you equate with music. That's what I love about that term art-music. It separates itself from music-music, the music people have always made.
Frank Fairfield
24.
Essentially any history we have is just a history of aristocrats. We don't have any history of people.
Frank Fairfield
25.
The history of music is nothing more than the history of art-music or classical music, the music that was commissioned by aristocrats.
Frank Fairfield
26.
Working in factories and things like that, it just puts a little hair on your chest.
Frank Fairfield