Best quotes by Jain on Music
Checkout quotes by Jain on Music
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‟ Moving to Dubai at age 9 and then the Congo, they were two completely opposite countries. But that brought me to music and taught me things that I never would have learned otherwise. And it was always about the rhythm in those two countries - that's why I love them.
- Jain
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‟ I think it's hard when you're a woman because the music industry is way more masculine than feminine, so you have to make your own space and fight for it.
- Jain
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‟ The thing is: Yes, I'm white and yes, I love African music, and I can't do anything about it.
- Jain
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‟ Well, the thing is I always listened to American music way more than French music.
- Jain
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‟ When I started making music, I wanted to enjoy it and make others enjoy it. But it's just music. I am not saving the world.
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‟ Music is open-minded and has always travelled, every country takes something from another, and that's what makes the richness of music.
- Jain
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‟ My mother is half-French, half-Malagasy, so I've been listening to African music, like Malian and Congolese music, since I was a child.
- Jain
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‟ When I travel I always try to see shows from a local group, and with the Internet it's important to have a global vision of music.
- Jain
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‟ At 16 I was living in the Congo, and, you know, it's your teenage time. I really wanted to find a way to express myself, so I started to write songs in the Congo, and I think that's why my music is quite open, with a lot of different influences.
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‟ Music is like my secret garden. It's where I heal myself from every pain that I feel. It's like a therapy.
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‟ My music would be very, very different if I haven't traveled.
- Jain
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‟ When I was nine, I was passing by a drum class and saw them playing and I was moved. That's why I started making music.
- Jain
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‟ For me to have the opportunity to learn the darbuka and the tabla in Dubai, it created my own thoughts for music.
- Jain
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‟ When I was little, I was listening to the Beatles, Bob Marley, Janis Joplin, and stuff. I had a big soul music culture, and not so much a French one.
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‟ My music was about travelling a lot and connecting with other people, and English is the voice of travelling.
- Jain
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‟ I was always playing with whatever I could get under my hands, making rhythm with it, which was natural for me, because my parents were listening to a lot of African music.
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‟ I grew up in a family where, when we listened to music everybody would dance, so for me that's a very natural thing to do.
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‟ Making music you can dance to is very important to me.
- Jain
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‟ I've been to India, Jordan, South Africa, Namibia, Senegal, Australia, Madagascar, Oman, The States, and a lot of countries in Europe, just to visit... I wanted to make music to connect all of these influences, and make a multicultural music with these experiences.
- Jain