It's believing you can push through the exhaustion just to be able to sing after you do a cartwheel or a split.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You've got to find ways to breathe while you're dancing so that when it comes time for you to stop and sing again, you have it.
Singing really oxygenates your blood. You stretch your lungs and take in much more air into them than before. It's really good for your health.
Singing becomes a form of therapy.
I think it keeps your brain moving faster, singing in another language.
Singing aloud leaves you with a sense of levity and contentedness.
Or if I have my head in the results, I can't work with what I have, because I'm trying to force something to happen. And with singing, any time you force it, you tighten up. If you tighten up, you're screwed, nothing will work.
You have to keep fit being a singer - that's part of the job. You can't do it unless you have incredible stamina.
It's kind of exhilarating, walking through a crazy, insane mob. The most miraculous process is watching a song go from a tiny idea in the middle of the night to something that 55,000 people are singing back to you.
As I got older, I got Parkinson's disease, so I couldn't sing at all. That's what happened to me. I was singing at my best strength when I developed Parkinson's. I think I've had it for quite a while.
If you don't ever stop singing, your voice stays in shape. It's like the marathon runner. You've got to run, run, run to stay in shape.