Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Karaoke. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Karaoke Quotes And Sayings by 99 Authors including Evan Rachel Wood,Emily Blunt,Sam Taylor-Wood,Sarah Paulson,David Walton for you to enjoy and share.
I'm a big karaoke fan and I also love Justin Bieber unashamedly.
It's nerve-wracking singing in front of people. I think that's why most people get drunk for karaoke.
I love karaoke. I love maudlin country ballads. In another life, I'd be Loretta Lynn.
My sister's a big karaoke person, and she's never been able to get me to do it.
I lived in Koreatown for five years, and I lived blocks away from about seven karaoke bars.
Well, we have theatrical parties. It's not me singing. People like to get up and jam on the piano.
You feel like you're really a part of a movement when you're singing Journey at a karaoke bar.
My go to karaoke song is 'Stars' from 'Les Mis', which is Javert's song. And it's super strange, and every time it comes on people are really weirded out, but that's what I do.
Even Karaoke needs higher standards than I can reach, so I have gone great lengths to avoid being bullied into it.
I just sing the songs that people don't expect you to sing, because I just love having fun at karaoke and I'm always a bit nervous to sing something serious.
When you go to karaoke with a professional singer and they really start singing, there's no bigger buzzkill than that.
Our age of mechanization leads along a road ending with man himself as a machine. Only the spirit of singing can save us from this fate.
When I pick songs for karaoke, I have three concerns: (1) What will this song say about me? (2) How will I sound singing it? and (3) How will it make people feel?
I can rock out anything. I mean, I can rock out a little 'Time After Time'. I can do a little 'Grease Lightning'. It depends on the mood, but we do go karaoke, my friends and I in Los Angeles, and it's a lot of fun.
Every small town has its dramatic group, its barber-shop quartet, every home has music in one form or another.
I was arrested for lip-syncing karaoke.
I am 'Mr. Karaoke Guy' in the car completely. I just go with it and don't care what anyone else thinks - I'm singing, man!
I'm awful at karaoke, but if I did have to sing, I'd go for my favourite Frank Sinatra song 'I've Got You Under My Skin.' The fact I love Frank is my grandfather's doing: he drummed it into me from a very early age that Frank Sinatra is God.
No more Karaoke for you!
Jessica
Apologize or your out!
But ... but you love me!
And we'll learn to live without you, too. unless you apologize.
Singing is a gift.
I like to sing love songs.
But we live in a karaoke society... Many people feel they have to dance to someone else's tune, to sing someone else's song.
I love singing and that's kind of my new thing.
A song is communicating with people. Entertainment is a different area.
Folk Music is the map of singing.
I am working on my nightclub act, definitely want to do more singing.
There is no good singing, there is only present and absent.
I prefer career artists that have spent time honing their craft, as opposed to, 'I won a karaoke contest on a reality show and now I have a record.' That's such a drag. The music that comes out of it is so poor.
Whenever I have friends over, we end up eating and talking and losing track of time, and, once in a while, singing karaoke. It reminds me of the family meals we had in Russia, which always lasted a very long time. That's a tradition I miss.
I believe in singing.
I can't watch American Idol ... it's like karaoke without the booze.
I like singing, but it's certainly not my strong point.
Singing is a form of meditation ... apparently the only one that I have command over.
I love to sing with different people.
I tried to sing 'What's Going On' with Amy Winehouse once at an old cinema in the West End. There was a funk band that had members of both of our bands playing in it, but it was the worst kind of place to sing bad karaoke because everyone there was an amazing singer or musician.
I only do private room karaoke where it's just me and one of my closest girlfriends. My mom always said I could really belt songs out, and the Dixie Chicks feed that encouragement.
Where's the need of singing now?
Now one thing I think is really lame, is if you're an artist and you go to a karaoke bar and sing your own song. I like to get up there and sing stuff that I would never sing on stage anywhere else. Like Neil Diamond.
He returned to the empty space above the pharmacy and continued his practice of the "empty hand", kara-te, whose root is the same as kara-oke, "empty orchestra", the sing-along entertainment machine in bars and homes, but whose meaning is infinitely more profound.
The Common Curriculum can easily become the karaoke curriculum, where everyone just follows the bouncing ball of the script.
But what I like to sing mostly is blues and cabaret style.
Sing with your voices, your hearts, your lips and your lives.
Somewhere, someone knows the words to the songs you sing.
I moonlight as a singer.
The Japanese Prime Minister has apologized for Japan's part in World War II. However, he still hasn't mentioned anything about karaoke.
I go in and sing the song and arrange it and mix it and that's it. It's no different than playing in clubs.
Singing becomes a form of therapy.
What I like about singing is that, for me, it's a substitute for the psychiatrist's couch.
I enjoy singing my songs in front of people.
There are other worlds to sing in.
And some people sing and dance.
I was in a karaoke video in 1991, for a song called 'Sukiyaki,' which is a very famous Japanese song, and I've actually heard from people that they've been in bars in Asia where they've seen me come up in the 'Sukiyaki' video that they play behind you. I'm in that. I'm in a karaoke video.
I can play characters who sing, but I don't like singing in a nightclub or something. It's not my metier.
I've just always loved singing, and I come from a family that loves singing around the kitchen table.
I love to sing with great singers.
I really love singing.
You explore beautiful songs & create your own interpretation of them.
I'm not a trained musician or singer, but I can turn out a song.
I love music, and I love singing.
I sing in key, thank you very much.
Singing is a lover's thing.
I've been singing since I could talk, pretty much. My dad was really musical and taught me how to sing harmonies and got me a karaoke machine with tape decks.
I'm not a big sing-and-dance man.
I like to sing with people, whether they're good or not.
Music, and moonlight, and love and <>rong>rorong>...mance." he sang softly to himself, tapping some computer
With technology now, you can go in and sing a song, and for $100,000, you will sound flawless.
Singing is what got me into everything and made me fall in love with this industry.
I grew up listening to cabaret. At 7 and 8 years old, I was already singing like a club performer,
There's a friendly tie of some sort between music and eating.
Singing and entertainment are now my first priority.
I only sing in my church choir. Except the other night, I stole the show at karaoke night.
I'm a singer who moves like a dancer.
I love to sing. Mostly about love and sex.
My singing ability is zilch.
The music I do is food ... that will be your dinner.
It is the best of all trades, to make songs, and the second best to sing them.
If our show [Carpool Karaoke] shines, then I shine. I don't ever want to come out and make anything about me. I want to make it about them, make them the best that they can be. And the whole thing is a collaboration, those carpools.
I think I should be a nightclub singer. I love to sing!
When I was a 7-year-old girl, in my bedroom, on my karaoke machine, I would sing 'On My Own' or do a one-woman version of 'Les Miserables.'
We all love to sing along with our favorite songs. We sing in the car, in the shower, and at the karaoke bar. The problem is that half the time we don't know what we're singing. We're making up lyrics as we go along and hoping no one will notice.
I'm a big fan of all those singing competition shows.
Wow, I really need to take [singing] more seriously!
Sometimes I like to make music together with a singer or with singers.
My dad is a singer. He used to sing in nightclubs, or pizza joints.
Sing us a song you're the piano man.
Sing us a song tonight.
Cause we're all in the mood for a melody,
And you've got us feeling all right.
I came from a very musical family, so I grew up singing karaoke with the family. My family said 'do this' and brought me to singing lessons. I had always been writing poems and songs.
When words leave off, music begins.
Which is this magical listening station, whereupon all musical worth is decided?
Music is interior decoration.
I sing songs from the theater and pop songs. When I say 'pop songs,' I mean from the 90's. And I tell jokes. So it's sort of a stand up show meets a concert - not your traditional lounging across a piano cabaret show. It's much looser.
I write bars, for the musicians, because they have to be together.
In the distance someone is singing.
I'm a terrible singer, but it helps when I have to call a taxi.
A lot of people don't know that I'm a singer - that's my thing, really.
No one knows this, but my dad can sing his face off.
I'm not actually even a very good singer. I'm not.
I'm a car singer, in fact sometimes I pretend to take my dog out for a walk, and I'll just drive him around and start singin'.
We can even sing off key, but if it's produced properly it can be a hit.
Ah, music, a magic beyond all we do here.
Singing is just a feeling set to music.