"It would make me feel that creative art has a chance in this crazy world that we all live in"
About this Quote
There is a weary hope baked into Jimmy Carl Black's line, the kind musicians learn to speak in after the novelty wears off and the bills don’t. "It would make me feel" is the tell: this isn’t a manifesto about art saving civilization. It’s a small, human request for evidence. He’s not claiming certainty that creative work matters; he’s confessing how easily the world convinces you it doesn’t.
The phrase "creative art" sounds almost formal, like he’s trying to dignify something that gets dismissed as indulgence. Coming from a working musician, that wording reads as defensive in the best way: an insistence that what he does is labor, not just lifestyle. Then comes the pivot to "a chance" - not victory, not recognition, just survival. The subtext is about odds. Art here is a long shot in a culture that rewards speed, noise, and certainty, and that treats attention like a commodity you rent by the second.
"Crazy world" is doing heavy lifting without being poetic. It’s a shorthand for instability: politics, money, the churn of taste, the constant pressure to be relevant. The most pointed part is "that we all live in". It refuses the romantic isolation of the artist. He’s not above the mess; he’s inside it with everyone else, trying to make something that isn’t just another product. The intent is modest, but the stakes are huge: he’s asking for one credible sign that making art is still a rational act.
The phrase "creative art" sounds almost formal, like he’s trying to dignify something that gets dismissed as indulgence. Coming from a working musician, that wording reads as defensive in the best way: an insistence that what he does is labor, not just lifestyle. Then comes the pivot to "a chance" - not victory, not recognition, just survival. The subtext is about odds. Art here is a long shot in a culture that rewards speed, noise, and certainty, and that treats attention like a commodity you rent by the second.
"Crazy world" is doing heavy lifting without being poetic. It’s a shorthand for instability: politics, money, the churn of taste, the constant pressure to be relevant. The most pointed part is "that we all live in". It refuses the romantic isolation of the artist. He’s not above the mess; he’s inside it with everyone else, trying to make something that isn’t just another product. The intent is modest, but the stakes are huge: he’s asking for one credible sign that making art is still a rational act.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
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