There's something about the theater which makes my fingertips tingle.

I used to love the feeling of running, of running too far. It made my skin tingle.

Heights make my feet tingle; not sure if that is a phobia, but it isn't the greatest feeling.

What makes creative people tingle are interesting problems, the chance to impress their friends, and caffeine.

When I was little I always thought I was marked out, special, on the verge of something momentous. I used to tingle with anticipation.

Watching artists like Joplin perform, I felt that tingle down my spine; I experienced the wonders of a cultural and musical revolution.

You can get some work, some jobs that will bore you until you're dead. So you better look for something that's got a little tingle to it.

You can't possibly fathom the ins and outs of a prepubescent beauty treatment until you've felt the strange but exhilarating tingle of a cottage-cheese-and-Pop-Rocks facial.

Especially with the live, just the way I curve words, it's about expression. It's so emotive, to be able to release these words into a mike. It really emphasizes this insane tingle down my spine whenever I play.

I've been through the first cap, the 50th, and the 100th, and I defy any player who has ever gone past all those milestones to look at each of them and say that first cap isn't the one that makes him tingle the most.

If it's a good LP, you'll get that tingle that makes you put it on again no matter what your initial reaction was. On the other hand, if you don't get that tingle, you'd better take it straight down to the record exchange.

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