A lot of people who work with Dre, you're lucky if anything sees the light of day.
“A lot of people who work with Dre, you're lucky if anything sees the light of day.”
— Anderson Paak · Sees
The World Motivation
A lot of people who work with Dre, you're lucky if anything sees the light of day.
“A lot of people who work with Dre, you're lucky if anything sees the light of day.”
— Anderson Paak · Sees
A lot of people who work with Dre, you're lucky if anything sees the light of day.
I just want people to be affected by the music. I'm really affected by my surroundings and put everything in my music - what I'm not getting and what I desire. I want it to be uncompromised... almost a spiritual thing.
I used to work with mentally disabled people when I was 18 or 19, changing diapers and catheters. I was working, like, 16 hour night shifts, having to distribute meds and go capture people who would break out of the house. Sometimes they'd have seizures, and we'd have to rush them to the hospital. That was an interesting time, very humbling.
I had a project called 'Cover Art,' which was the first project I did under the new name Anderson .Paak. I went through this process where I was recording new music for about six months straight.
The floor of the U.S. Senate isn't a place that usually sees a lot of drama.
One of the things that I like to pride myself on is being the guy who sees the game through till the end.
Who is the wise man? He who sees what's going to be born.
Everybody goes and sees 'Fantastic Four,' but nobody sees 'Sunshine.' I'd have a different career if people saw that.
In order to get better, you've got to give to your team. If you give to your team, everybody sees it, everybody feels it, and it makes the next person next to you want to give to you.