You really need to be on top of what you own, and you've got to be on top of your record-keeping. Imagine one day if a major bank is taken down and the records are gone.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
So why sign your name in blood for more? It seemed like a sensible arrangement for me. I didn't sell large numbers of records and the record company paid advances they rarely recouped.
I don't know if I want to break my own record. I think I would rather leave it as it is.
If you look at my record, I have a clean record.
I pretty much just focus on making the records - unless I'm self-releasing them; then I do my own thing. But at some point, you have to stop worrying about chains of distribution, or it takes out of your time to write.
Records... a record just shouldn't be that important.
There are a lot of obligations when you put out a record and it does well. People want to talk to you, which is nice. So then you make sure you do that.
I just don't think you can make records easily and have them be great. It's a process. You've got to get really lucky all the time, or you've got to work like mad.
I am a record executive and I shall be right there in your face with my records.
You don't always have to have a record out. I'm not a sausage factory, you know, turning out records every year.
The record company stay out of my way. Whenever the record is finished, they take it.