Quote by Trevor Dunn
I feel akin to the Platypus. An orphan in a family. A swimmer, a r

I feel akin to the Platypus. An orphan in a family. A swimmer, a recluse. Part bird, part fish, part lizard. – Trevor Dunn

Other quotes by Trevor Dunn

I remember when metal was something you really had to search out, and now I hear it on car commercials. – Trevor Dunn

Category:
car
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It wasnt until after private lessons and learning bass lines that I even noticed bass in the music I was listening to at that age. My ears were blown wide open. – Trevor Dunn

Category:
Learning
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I guess the two Manifesto, Communicating Vessels, Mad Love, and some of his poetry made a significant mark on me but as far as bringing a literary element into the music I see it as a much broader assimilation. – Trevor Dunn

Category:
Poetry
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Other Quotes from
Family
category

Choosing to be in the theatre was a way to put my roots down somewhere with other people. It was a way to choose a new family. – Juliette Binoche

Category:
Family

But the problem is that when I go around and speak on campuses, I still dont get young men standing up and saying, How can I combine career and family? – Gertrude Stein

Category:
Family

I enjoy what Im able to give my family. – Shia LaBeouf

Category:
Family

The family is the school of duties – founded on love. – Felix Adler

Category:
Family

Random Quotes

All the perplexities, confusions, and distresses in America arise, not from defects in their constitution or confederation, not from a want of honor or virtue, so much as from downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and circulation. – John Adams

Category:
Random

So many tangles in life are ultimately hopeless that we have no appropriate sword other than laughter. – Gordon W. Allport

Category:
Laughter

Our fears are an amazing gift of the imagination… a way of glimpsing what might be the future when theres still time to influence how that future will play out. – Karen Thompson Walker

Category:
amazing

If… the machine of government… is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law. – Henry David Thoreau, On the Duty of Civil Disobediance, 1849