"I am constantly amazed at their support over the years"
About this Quote
There’s a studied humility in “I am constantly amazed at their support over the years,” the kind that reads less like PR polish and more like a musician still slightly disoriented by longevity. Mike McCready isn’t marveling at applause in the abstract; he’s pointing to duration as the real miracle. “Over the years” turns fandom into a relationship measured in time, not hype cycles. In rock culture, where “relevance” is treated like a quarterly report, sustained support is the rare commodity.
The phrasing does quiet work. “Constantly” suggests the amazement never calcified into entitlement. It’s a subtle rebuttal to the myth that success hardens artists into brands. McCready, long associated with a band that rose during an era allergic to corporate sheen, keeps the emotional register human: gratitude as a daily surprise, not a scheduled obligation. Even the vagueness of “their” is strategic. He doesn’t name “fans” outright, leaving room for the wider ecosystem that keeps a career alive: listeners, crew, radio champions, promoters, fellow musicians. It’s inclusive without turning into a roll call.
The subtext is also a hedge against rock’s most common narrative trap: the tortured genius who deserves everything because he suffered for it. McCready frames support as a gift, not a debt being repaid. Coming from a legacy act with a multigenerational audience, the line acknowledges a simple truth: you can write great songs and still vanish. The amazement is the point; it keeps the whole enterprise from curdling into inevitability.
The phrasing does quiet work. “Constantly” suggests the amazement never calcified into entitlement. It’s a subtle rebuttal to the myth that success hardens artists into brands. McCready, long associated with a band that rose during an era allergic to corporate sheen, keeps the emotional register human: gratitude as a daily surprise, not a scheduled obligation. Even the vagueness of “their” is strategic. He doesn’t name “fans” outright, leaving room for the wider ecosystem that keeps a career alive: listeners, crew, radio champions, promoters, fellow musicians. It’s inclusive without turning into a roll call.
The subtext is also a hedge against rock’s most common narrative trap: the tortured genius who deserves everything because he suffered for it. McCready frames support as a gift, not a debt being repaid. Coming from a legacy act with a multigenerational audience, the line acknowledges a simple truth: you can write great songs and still vanish. The amazement is the point; it keeps the whole enterprise from curdling into inevitability.
Quote Details
| Topic | Gratitude |
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