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Creativity Quote by Leo Kottke

"I was two and a half and my folks would put it on the record player and I would run around the house screaming, but I haven't been that hip since"

About this Quote

A toddler sprinting laps and shrieking to a record is a perfect origin myth for a musician who’s spent his career making meticulous, oddly intimate noise. Kottke’s line lands because it refuses the usual genius narrative. No solemn “I knew then.” Just pure, bodily reaction: sound as stimulus, music as something that hijacks you before you can narrate it. The image is funny, but it’s also a quiet thesis about how taste starts as sensation, not identity.

“I haven’t been that hip since” is the knife twist. He borrows the language of cool, then undercuts it with self-deprecation that feels earned rather than performative. Hipness here isn’t trend-chasing; it’s the unselfconscious openness of a kid who doesn’t yet know what’s embarrassing. The joke is that adulthood professionalizes everything, even your relationship to music. Once you become “a musician,” you’re expected to be discerning, controlled, maybe even tasteful. The toddler doesn’t do tasteful. He does overwhelmed.

Context matters: Kottke’s reputation is built on technical mastery paired with a deadpan persona, and the quote plays like stage banter that doubles as cultural commentary. It nudges at the way scenes and genres fetishize cool while the real spark is often awkward, loud, and inconvenient. Under the laugh is a longing for the pre-ironic moment when music didn’t signal who you were; it just made your whole body move.

Quote Details

TopicMusic
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Leo Kottke on Childhood Hipness and Musical Authenticity
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About the Author

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Leo Kottke (born September 11, 1945) is a Musician from USA.

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