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Jazz In The 1920s Quotes & Sayings

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Top Jazz In The 1920s Quotes

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Stephen King

When I bore you, just tell me to shut up, I won't be offended.'
'I like to listen,' Stu said.
'Then you are one of God's chosen. Let's go. — Stephen King

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By William Kennedy

Well-lit streets discourage sin, but don't overdo it. — William Kennedy

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By John Laroche

Adaptation is a profound process. Means you figure out how to thrive in the world. — John Laroche

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Blaise Pascal

Love has reasons which reason cannot understand. — Blaise Pascal

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By William Kennedy

Roscoe was spiritually illegal, a bootlegger of the soul, a mythic creature made of words and wit and wild deeds and boundless memory. — William Kennedy

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Malcolm Cowley

Everywhere was the atmosphere of a long debauch that had to end; the orchestras played too fast, the stakes were too high at the gambling tables, the players were so empty, so tired, secretly hoping to vanish together into sleep and ... maybe wake on a very distant morning and hear nothing, whatever, no shouting or crooning, find all things changed. — Malcolm Cowley

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Karina Halle

Your face never looks better than when you've got a gun in your hand and money under your ass. — Karina Halle

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By William Kennedy

Billy's native arrogance might well have been a gift of miffed genes, then come to splendid definition through the tests to which a street like Broadway puts a young man on the make: tests designed to refine a breed, enforce a code, exclude all simps and gumps, and deliver into the city's life a man worthy of functioning in this age of nocturnal supremacy. Men like Billy Phelan, forged in the brass of Broadway, send, in the time of their splendor, telegraphic statements of mission: I, you bums, am a winner. And that message, however devoid of Christ-like other-cheekery, dooms the faint-hearted Scottys of the night, who must sludge along, never knowing how it feels to spill over with the small change of sassiness, how it feels to leave the spillover on the floor, more where that came from, pal. Leave it for the sweeper. — William Kennedy

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Joshua Zeitz

( ... )"Flapper" - the notorious character type who bobbed her hair, smoked cigarettes, drank gin, sported short skirts, and passed her evenings in steamy jazz clubs, where she danced in a shockingly immodest fashion with a revolving cast of male suitors. — Joshua Zeitz

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Johnny Mathis

I'm just one of the lucky people. I have no other reason for my longevity. — Johnny Mathis

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Aldis Hodge

Some of my job consists of me drafting and making technical drawings. So everything I did back then has materialized into something substantial for me today. Whatever kids are into, that might be their thing. — Aldis Hodge

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Ed Speleers

I did listen to 1920s jazz or Al Johnson and a lot of early singers coming out of England. I would branch out a little bit to get a sense of the world that he might be coming into, in the '30s when jazz was changing. — Ed Speleers

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Leo Tolstoy

Well, is ev'wything weady?' asked Denisov. 'Bwing the horses. — Leo Tolstoy

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Ruadhan J. McElroy

As I've said before, "the Mod generation", contrary to popular belief, was not born in even 1958, but in the 1920s after a steady gestation from about 1917 or so. Now, Mod certainly came of age, fully sure of itself by 1958, completely misunderstood by 1963, and in a perpetual cycle of reinvention and rediscovery of itself by 1967 and 1975, respectively, but it was born in the 1920s, and I will maintain this. I don't care who disagrees with me, and there are dozens of reasons that I do so - from the Art Deco aesthetic, to flapper fashions (complete with bobbed hair), to androgyny and subtle effeminacy, to jazz. — Ruadhan J. McElroy

Jazz In The 1920s Quotes By Duke Ellington

The word [jazz] never lost its association with those New Orleans bordellos. In the 1920s I used to try to convince Fletcher Henderson that we ought to call what we were doing 'Negro music'. But it's too late for that now. — Duke Ellington