Jimi Hendrix Death Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Jimi Hendrix Death with everyone.
Top Jimi Hendrix Death Quotes

When gratitude o'erflows the swelling heart, and breathes in free and uncorrupted praise for benefits received, propitious heaven takes such acknowledgment as fragrant incense, and doubles all its blessings. — George Lillo

I'm the one that's got to die when it's time for me to die, so let me live my life the way I want to. — Jimi Hendrix

You see, Squirt, there's heaven, and then there's hell. Hell is where they send all the bad people, like criminals and con artists and parking inspectors. And heaven is where they send all the good people, like you and me and that nice blonde from MasterChef.
What happens when you get there?
In heaven, you hang out with God and Jimi Hendrix, and you get to eat doughnuts whenever you want. In hell, you have to, uh . . . do the Macarena. Forever. To that "Grease Megamix."
Where do you go if you're good and bad?
What? I don't know. IKEA? — Brooke Davis

People still mourn when people die. That's self-sympathy. All human beings are selfish to a certain extent, and that's why people get so sad when someone dies. They haven't finished using him. The person who is dead ain't crying. Sadness is for when a baby is born into this heavy world, and joy should be exhibited at someone's death because they are going on to something more permanent and infinitely better. — Jimi Hendrix

Christ can come back at any time so the one thing you want to have in your life is a focused prayer time. — Francis Chan

The only way to have several currencies from divergent nations lumped together is if they are culturally close, such as Germany, the Netherlands and Austria. If they aren't, it simply can't continue to work. — Alan Greenspan

Had Kurt Cobain not committed suicide in 1994, would his genius have survived the continuous incisions of a media that was only too proud of its ability to chisel away at his fragile psyche in the years before he decided that he'd had enough off their invasions? And, had Jimi Hendrix not passed way in 1970, would he, too have eventually fallen into decline, first equalled, then eclipsed by the brilliant wave of new guitarists: Robin Trower, Ritchie Blackmore, Mick Ronson, who emerged during the early 1970s? In death, Hendrix led by example: in life he could have been left for the dead. — Dave Thompson

I like when you can have a conversation with people and it's not just stock questions. — Jonah Hill

If diplomacy is the art of persuading others to act as we would wish, effective foreign policy requires that we comprehend why others act as they do — Madeleine K. Albright

It's funny how most people love the dead, once you're dead, you're made for life. — Jimi Hendrix

Always distrust absolute statements! Even this one. — Margreet De Heer