I never fixed a story. I didn’t make judgments, I let the listener make judgments. When I got to the end of the story, if it had a moral, I let the listener find it.
Meaning of the quote
Tom T. Hall, an American musician, says that he never changed his stories or told the listener what to think. He let the listener decide what they thought about the story and find the message or lesson on their own. He didn't judge the story or tell the listener how to feel, but allowed them to form their own opinion and discover the meaning.
About Tom T. Hall
Tom T. Hall, the legendary country music singer-songwriter, was known as “The Storyteller” for his exceptional ability to craft compelling narratives through his songs. He had an impressive career, earning 12 No. 1 hits and being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008, solidifying his status as one of the greatest songwriters in the genre’s history.
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More quotes from Tom T. Hall
If Barbara Walters was interviewing me, I’d figure her career was as dead as mine!
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Faulkner was almost oriental. I never got into Faulkner.
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The first guy who came up with the concept of religion was sitting out under a tree. I’m sure of that.
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My theory is if you have a religion, it’s a good one. Because some people don’t have any at all.
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Religion is a strange, wonderful thing. More crimes have been committed in the name of righteousness than any other notion.
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My best album is called In Search Of A Song. That was my best shot right there. My finest hour, as they say. I could listen to the whole thing all the way through. There’s nothing really crammed into it.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I was quite a reader before I became a writer.
American country musician (1936-2021)
People think because you’re private, you have something you don’t want them to know.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I was well traveled, and I created this illusion of literacy through reading and writing. I wrote a book of short stories.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I have my own religion. I’m sort of one-quarter Baptist, one-quarter Catholic, one-quarter Jewish.
American country musician (1936-2021)
When you retire, it’s a place in life, a part of the journey. You just don’t quit work; you develop an attitude where you can do what you please.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I had the notion that I wanted to write the great dirty American novel, so I went to Roanoke College on the GI Bill.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I am a fan of history.
American country musician (1936-2021)
It used to be that you’d have a song recorded by a major country artist and if it was a hit, you could buy a car. Now you can buy a dealership.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I love winners when they cry, losers when they try.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I have had hundreds of people work for me over the years, and I don’t think I ever fired anybody.
American country musician (1936-2021)
The best compliment I ever had is, one day I was in Nashville, some disc jockey said, Hey, that sounds like a Tom T. Hall song. Up until then there hadn’t been any such thing.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I never fixed a story. I didn’t make judgments, I let the listener make judgments. When I got to the end of the story, if it had a moral, I let the listener find it.
American country musician (1936-2021)
Young kids are doing the same thing I did, but they’re doing it differently. They don’t do brain surgery the way they used to do it either.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I took up a sort of a hobby of just hanging around the local library. I’d pick out an author and I would read all their books.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I never hid out. I was never big enough a star.
American country musician (1936-2021)
After I retired and came off the road, I gathered up all my musical instruments and suddenly, I wanted them all to be perfect.
American country musician (1936-2021)
Whiskey’s to tough, Champagne costs too much, Vodka puts my mouth in gear. I hope this refrain, Will help me explain, As a matter of fact, I like beer.
American country musician (1936-2021)
This generation should entertain this generation. It’s only fair. When I was a kid, I mowed the lawn. Now, somebody else’s kid can mow the lawn.
American country musician (1936-2021)
The way you look for songs, you find yourself looking for little signals and clues about life and how things are.
American country musician (1936-2021)
The first time with artistic endeavors is, if it’s working, it was your idea, and if it’s not, it’s somebody else’s idea.
American country musician (1936-2021)
I’m a very comfortable and happy-go-lucky old man. I never wanted to be great, because I’d just get worried.
American country musician (1936-2021)