If you can play well in the studio, you can play well on stage.
Meaning of the quote
If you can play your instrument really well when you're recording in the studio, then you'll be able to play just as well when you perform on stage in front of an audience. The skills and practice you put in behind the scenes will translate to your live performances.
About Ritchie Blackmore
Ritchie Blackmore is an English guitarist who was the founding member and lead guitarist of the iconic rock band Deep Purple. After leaving Deep Purple in 1975, he formed the hard rock band Rainbow, which fused baroque music influences and elements of hard rock. In 1997, he created the traditional folk rock project Blackmore’s Night with his wife Candice Night. Ritchie Blackmore is regarded as one of the greatest and most influential guitar players of all time.
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More quotes from Ritchie Blackmore
I’m not good enough, technically, to be a classic musician. I lack discipline.
British guitarist
When you’ve toured for about 10 years like me, you end up feeling like you’re always waiting for somebody or something. The whole day is a drag.
British guitarist
Pete Townshend used to crash chords and let the guitar feed back. He’s overrated.
British guitarist
When something is not good, it’s bad. Period.
British guitarist
Simplicity is the key.
British guitarist
Those record companies don’t know what’s happening at all.
British guitarist
Stevie Ray Vaughan was very intense. Maybe that’s what caught everybody’s attention. As a player, he didn’t do anything amazing.
British guitarist
I’m not into that Keith Richard trip of having all those guitars in different tunings. I never liked the Rolling Stones much anyway.
British guitarist
If a ballet dancer falls over, it’s knowing how to get out looking clumsy that counts.
British guitarist
I don’t use the twang bar anymore. It’s become too popular.
British guitarist
I was impressed by Hendrix. His attitude was brilliant. Even the way he walked was amazing.
British guitarist
I feel like I own the stage.
British guitarist
I’ve always played every amp I’ve ever had full up, because rock and roll is supposed to be played loud. Also, that’s how you get your sustain.
British guitarist
Jimi… He was the gov’nor and that’s it. He was brilliant, wasn’t he?
British guitarist
The cello is such a melancholy instrument, such an isolated, miserable instrument.
British guitarist
I however don’t go to clubs to show off and to be seen, and certainly not to make statements. I just want to be able to quietly watch a band.
British guitarist
I can turn on some jazz guitarist, and he won’t do a thing for me, if he’s not playing electrically. But Jeff Beck’s great to listen to.
British guitarist
Everything I do is usually totally spontaneous.
British guitarist
The only way you can get good, unless you’re a genius, is to copy. That’s the best thing. Just steal.
British guitarist
Session work makes you more strict. You can’t hit notes all over the place. You’ve got to make each one really count.
British guitarist
I can imagine that Rod Stewart likes giving autographs because he’s pure showbusiness.
British guitarist
I don’t put myself on Jeff Beck’s level, but I can relate to him when he says he’d rather be working on his car collection than playing the guitar.
British guitarist
I have never met one person who likes Grand Funk.
British guitarist
When I was 20, I didn’t give a damn about song construction. I just wanted to make as much noise and play as fast and as loud as possible.
British guitarist
I can do the old hand vibrato just fine, but I like attacking the strings.
British guitarist
Playing a Fender is an art itself. They’re always going out of tune.
British guitarist
What’s the point of re-releasing an album? The original sounded good, why change something about it?
British guitarist
But you have to give your whole life to a cello. When I realized that, I went back to the guitar and just turned the volume up a bit louder.
British guitarist
If you can play well in the studio, you can play well on stage.
British guitarist
Learning to play with a big amplifier is like trying to control an elephant.
British guitarist
Ian Gillan, Roger Glover and I wanted to be a hard rock band – we wanted to play rock and roll only.
British guitarist
I’m very moved by Renaissance music, but I still love to play hard rock – though only if it’s sophisticated and has some thought behind it.
British guitarist
I don’t see myself as such an important guitarist.
British guitarist
I criticize my own work pretty harshly.
British guitarist
I was impressed by Hendrix. Not so much by his playing, as his attitude – he wasn’t a great player, but everything else about him was brilliant.
British guitarist
I can never remember what I do even in the studio.
British guitarist
When you’re around someone good, your own standards are raised.
British guitarist
I like leaping around on stage as long as it’s done with class. None of this jumping up in the air and doing the splits.
British guitarist
When you’re recording, if you’re not really clean in your playing, it sounds like a mess.
British guitarist
Johnny Winter is one of the best blues players in the world. He’s very underrated.
British guitarist
I had given up the guitar between ’75 and ’78. I completely lost interest. I was sick of hearing other guitar players and I was tired of my tunes.
British guitarist