"We have time, there's no big rush"
About this Quote
It lands like a deep breath between guitar solos: a small sentence that refuses the culture of urgency. Coming from Jimi Hendrix, “We have time, there’s no big rush” reads less like a scheduling note and more like an aesthetic stance. Hendrix’s music is obsessed with time - stretching it, bending it, making a three-minute single feel like a weather system. The line carries that same instinct: slow down, stay inside the moment, let the feeling arrive on its own.
The subtext is almost defiant. Rock stardom in the late 60s ran on acceleration: tours stacked on tours, studios booked around the clock, a press machine hungry for the next provocation. Hendrix was treated as both genius and product, expected to constantly deliver new proof of his myth. “No big rush” pushes back against that conveyor belt. It’s also the language of a bandleader who knows that forcing it kills it; anyone who’s watched improvisation happen understands that tension and haste flatten the very thing you’re chasing.
There’s a darker echo, too, because we can’t hear it without knowing how little time he actually had. That’s what gives the quote its sting: an artist associated with intensity insisting on patience, while his era - and his industry - kept speeding him up. It’s a reminder that “time” isn’t just minutes on a clock; it’s creative room, human room, the right to move at the tempo your life requires.
The subtext is almost defiant. Rock stardom in the late 60s ran on acceleration: tours stacked on tours, studios booked around the clock, a press machine hungry for the next provocation. Hendrix was treated as both genius and product, expected to constantly deliver new proof of his myth. “No big rush” pushes back against that conveyor belt. It’s also the language of a bandleader who knows that forcing it kills it; anyone who’s watched improvisation happen understands that tension and haste flatten the very thing you’re chasing.
There’s a darker echo, too, because we can’t hear it without knowing how little time he actually had. That’s what gives the quote its sting: an artist associated with intensity insisting on patience, while his era - and his industry - kept speeding him up. It’s a reminder that “time” isn’t just minutes on a clock; it’s creative room, human room, the right to move at the tempo your life requires.
Quote Details
| Topic | Time |
|---|
More Quotes by Jimi
Add to List





