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Willie Nelson Quotes

Quotes tagged as "willie-nelson" Showing 1-7 of 7
Willie Nelson
“When I started counting my blessings, my whole life turned around.”
Willie Nelson

Willie Nelson
“As adults we try to relax from the never-ending quest for reason and order by drinking a little whiskey or smoking whatever works for us, but the wisdom isn't in the whiskey or the smoke. The wisdom is in the moments when the madness slips away and we remember the basics.”
Willie Nelson, The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart

Kinky Friedman
“In April 1933, Willie's mother, Myrle, gave birth to him in a manger somewhere along the old highway between Waco & Dallas. There were angels in attendance that night. Some of them, no doubt, flying too close to the ground:”
Kinky Friedman, Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die: Musings from the Road

Willie Nelson
“And when I die, put it on my stone. God said, Sucker get your bad ass home. I wasn't Superman. I wasn't Superman”
Willie Nelson, Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die: Musings from the Road

Ray Palla
“You, sir, are as twisted as a twelve-string banjo. —Willie Nelson to Sheriff Preston Bank”
Ray Palla, SIMPLE TRIPLE STANDARD

Rich Hall
“Not many musicians can get 10000 people to show up and help pay his back taxes, and when farmers are going broke and transatlantic pipelines need to be stopped and towns are blown up in fertilizer explosions or schools for impaired children need to be built, Willie shows up. Does the show for free. For three hours. Everyone has a good time, and somewhere, Bono squirms just a little bit on that self-righteous cross he's nailed himself to.”
Rich Hall

Lawrence Wright
“I'm in a group that puts up statues in Austin, and our most recent work was a bronze Willie, holding Trigger, that now graces the entry to the Austin City Limits studio. I got to pose for that statue, holding a Martin guitar of the same model, N-20. Clete Shields, of Philadelphia, was our sculptor. In 2011, when the statue was cast and delivered to Austin, we covered it with a parachute and stored it in a movie studio until it could be installed. One night, Willie came by for a private unveiling. He was gracious but a little overwhelmed as he exchanged a long look with himself. Bill Wittliff, who is on our committee, explained that what we liked about this piece was its engagement with the audience. "People will come to you," he said. "Little children will touch your knee and seek your counsel."
"Do what I say and not what I do," Willie advised.”
Lawrence Wright, God Save Texas: A Journey into the Soul of the Lone Star State