I was so wild and crazy and dumb in my car. It didn’t run but 30 miles an hour. You made do.

Meaning of the quote

This quote by American musician Muddy Waters is about how he had a car that could only go 30 miles per hour, but he still had fun and made the most of it. Even though his car was slow, he was wild, crazy, and a little silly when driving it. He didn't let the limitations of his car stop him from enjoying the ride and doing the best he could with what he had.

About Muddy Waters

Muddy Waters, born McKinley Morganfield, was a pioneering figure in the post-World War II blues scene and is often called the “father of modern Chicago blues”. He grew up in Mississippi, moved to Chicago, and recorded several blues classics in the 1950s that influenced rock and roll.

More about the author

More quotes from Muddy Waters

Saturday night is your big night. Everybody used to fry up fish and have one hell of a time. Find me playing till sunrise for 50 cents and a sandwich. And be glad of it. And they really liked the low-down blues.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I was so wild and crazy and dumb in my car. It didn’t run but 30 miles an hour. You made do.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I wanted to get out of Mississippi in the worst way. Go back? What I want to go back for?

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Now that I’m gettin’ old enough to get some money, I’d like to have some money. I don’t get much made, I need to conquer a big chunk of money. Not quit playin’ but quit playin’ so hard.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Man, you don’t know how I felt that afternoon when I heard that voice and it was my own voice.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I wanted to definitely be a musician or a good preacher or a heck of a baseball player. I couldn’t play ball too good – I hurt my finger, and I stopped that. I couldn’t preach, and well, all I had left was getting into the music thing.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I was messing around with the harmonica… but I was 13 before I got a real good note out of it.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

That Mississippi sound, that Delta sound is in them old records. You can hear it all the way through.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I was always singing the way I felt, and maybe I didn’t exactly know it, but I just didn’t like the way things were down there-in Mississippi.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

You get a heck of a sound from the church. Can’t you hear it in my voice?

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I got up one Christmas morning and we didn’t have nothing to eat. We didn’t have an apple, we didn’t have an orange, we didn’t have a cake, we didn’t have nothing.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Robert Johnson? No, I didn’t know him, personally.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I stone got crazy when I saw somebody run down them strings with a bottleneck. My eyes lit up like a Christmas tree and I said that I had to learn.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Our little house was way back in the country. We had one house close to us, and hell the next one would’ve been a mile. If you got sick, you could holler and wouldn’t nobody hear you.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Of course that was my idol, Son House. I think he did a lot for the Mississippi slide down there.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I went to school, but they didn’t give you too much schooling because just as soon as you was big enough, you get to working in the fields. I guess I was a big boy for my age.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

If you got something you don’t want other people to know, keep it in your pocket.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

There’s no way in the world I can feel the same blues the way I used to. When I play in Chicago, I’m playing up-to-date, not the blues I was born with. People should hear the pure blues – the blues we used to have when we had no money.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

Oh, I started out young. They handed me a cotton sack when I was about 8 years old. Give me a little small one, tell me to fill it up. I never did like the farm but I was out there with my grandmother, didn’t want to get away from around her too far.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I been in the blues all my life. I’m still delivering ’cause I got a long memory.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

I rambled all the time. I was just like that, like a rollin’ stone.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)

My grandmother, she say I shouldn’t be playing. I should go to church. Fially, I say I’m going do this, I’m going do it. And she got where she didn’t bother me about it.

Muddy Waters

American blues musician (1913-1983)