Live music is better.

Live music is healthy.

I love seeing live music.

Live music is the cure for what ails ya.

It's always inspiring to watch live music.

Older people generally appreciate live music.

There's nothing better than live music, I think.

I think I was made for live music. It's just great.

There is only one better thing than music - live music.

We always go out looking for live music after our shows.

SDC has a great reputation for putting live music on stage.

I am lucky to live in Austin, so I can enjoy the live music.

Live music is where you get the inspiration and the creativity.

I grew up to the sound of live music in our Brooklyn household.

As rich as Cincinnati was in live music, New York was even more.

It's about how you're using the space. That's what makes live music.

There's nothing to compare to live music, there just isn't anything.

I love live music and I love to see people's faces when I'm performing.

I watch a lot of live music, and I love the theatre, especially musicals.

I just think, certainly for live music it should look as good as it sounds.

Our goal is to continue to be a global consolidator of the live music business.

The power of live music is vast. Live music is a wonderful way to spend some time.

Fewer and fewer bars are doing live music. Instead it's more DJs and dance parties.

I'm a big fan of live music and going to gigs, but I'll leave it to the professionals.

There's nothing better than live music. It's raw energy, and raw energy feeds the soul.

All of the silent films had live music accompaniment, so it's actually a very rich period in music.

I listen mostly to live music, and mostly my musical experience was playing music with other people.

Dr. Dre I've always been a huge fan of. The Roots as well. The Roots gave me an appreciation for live music.

That's why people come to live music, right? To see something go wrong, something human, something vulnerable.

There wasn't a lot of live music that you could hear where I came from, which was a small town in southeast Missouri.

I love watching live music. It's one of the reasons I love living in Austin, Texas, because there is so much live music.

I love dive bars, old movie theaters, live music and good food. The simplest things in life for me are the most important.

One of my first bartending gigs was on Santa Monica Boulevard at Doug Weston's Troubadour, a very famous live music venue.

We've had the good fortune of performing to live music a few times in our career and it always creates a different dynamic.

I love being in the studio, and I am a huge fan of live music. Without writing good stuff in the studio, you have nothing to play live.

I gotta be me. I'm going to go to ball games, because that's what I do. I'm going to go to live music shows, because I love live music.

With so many ways to communicate at our disposal, we must not forget the transformative power of a live music experience and genuine human exchange.

'Lost,' at its core, is a science-fiction show. Live music helps lend an air of legitimacy to this otherwise crazy storyline. It makes a big difference.

When you have live music in the background, people are usually talking over it. You don't actually get to listen to live music in your space all the time.

Women do not like CDs of live music. We only like the original recordings. If a song sounds different from the version we fell in love with, then it's awful.

I was born in Alabama and my first live music experiences were in church. Every Sunday we watched regional gospel groups on television singing their hearts out.

Hee Haw was probably my biggest exposure to live music at a young age, because there wasn't any live music around my town and no one in my family played instruments.

I'm one of those guys that is still a bit afraid of the telephone, its implications for conversation. I still wonder if the jukebox might be the death of live music.

But then I'm one of those guys that is still a bit afraid of the telephone, its implications for conversation. I still wonder if the jukebox might be the death of live music.

People have to learn... what do you really want from a live show? Do you want people to stand there and entertain you or to challenge themselves and you? It's live music, it's alive.

When you are studying jazz, the best thing to do is listen to records or listen to live music. It isn't as though you go to a teacher. You just listen as much as you can and absorb everything.

When I was growing up, every show had live music. Now, almost none have live music. Probably 97 percent of the shows on television are probably synthesized, or mostly synthesized, and that's a shame.

I felt from time to time that shooting live music is the most purely cinematic thing you can do. Ideally, the cinema is becoming one with the music. There is little artifice involved. There's no acting. I love it.

The virtual choir would never replace live music or a real choir, but the same sort of focus and intent and esprit de corps is evident in both, and at the end of the day it seems to me a genuine artistic expression.

Live music is incredible because you get to be with people, and you get to have this tactile, real-world experience, but at the end of the day, if your eyes are closed and you're getting swept away, it's like... I don't know.

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