When I’m 33, I quit.
Lose your dreams and you might lose your mind.
I don’t think that being in a full-time relationship is necessarily for everybody all of the time. It’s not necessarily some state of grace.
I think it’s very important that you have at least some sort of inner thing you don’t talk about. That’s why I find it distasteful when all these pop stars talk about their habits.
Normally I am not so violent. Everything comes from the question: Where will I die? It is a strong concern.
It’s all right letting yourself go, as long as you can get yourself back.
As long as my face is on page one, I don’t care what they say about me on page seventeen.
I’d rather be dead than singing ‘Satisfaction’ when I’m forty-five.
Don’t you think it’s sometimes wise not to grow up.
People are so brainwashed by the rules that they don’t know what really matters.
Everyone knows what their roots are, but you’ve got to explore everywhere. You’ve got to explore the sky too.
A good thing never ends.
I didn’t have any inhibitions. I saw Elvis and Gene Vincent, and I thought, “Well, I can do this.” And I liked doing it.
For some people it’s real therapy to talk to journalists about their private lives and inner thoughts. But I would rather keep something to myself.
I like to have a peek, see what the audience is doing during the opening act, because it gives you a clue and gives you a good feeling of where you are – the air can be different in different places.
If you are British, you soon get used to people not loving you. The Irish remind us of offenses from 100 years ago. Perhaps we should react to what the French did to us even longer ago.