Quote by Ritchie Blackmore
The only way you can get good, unless youre a genius, is to copy.

The only way you can get good, unless youre a genius, is to copy. Thats the best thing. Just steal. – Ritchie Blackmore

Other quotes by Ritchie Blackmore

I dont put myself on Jeff Becks level, but I can relate to him when he says hed rather be working on his car collection than playing the guitar. – Ritchie Blackmore

Category:
car
Read Quote

Stevie Ray Vaughan was very intense. Maybe thats what caught everybodys attention. As a player, he didnt do anything amazing. – Ritchie Blackmore

Category:
amazing
Read Quote
Other Quotes from
best
category

Heres what I tell anybody and this is what I believe. The greatest gift we have is the gift of life. We understand that. That comes from our Creator. Were given a body. Now you may not like it, but you can maximize that body the best it can be maximized. – Mike Ditka

Category:
best

The statistics on sanity are that one out of every four Americans is suffering from some form of mental illness. Think of your three best friends. If theyre okay, then its you. – Rita Mae Brown

Category:
best

Ive given it my all. Ive done my best. Now, Im ready with my family to begin the next phase of our lives. – Richard M. Daley

Category:
best

In this world youve just got to hope for the best and prepare for the worst and take whatever God sends. – Lucy Maud Montgomery

Category:
best

Random Quotes

I arrived in California with no job, no car, and no money, but, like millions of other girls, a dream. – Victoria Principal

Category:
car
[S]ources are not too reliable. The words and thoughts are the thing. “The best words in the best order” is the object of all quotations. Who made the order and when is of interest, but not vital as the many quotations by “Anon.” testify. – Robert Irvine Fitzhenry (1918–2008), The Harper Book of Quotations

Category:
Quotations

Nonsense is good only because common sense is so limited. – George Santayana

Category:
Nonsense

That sense of a life in natural objects, which in most poetry is but a rhetorical artifice, was, then, in Wordsworth the assertion of what was for him almost literal fact. – Walter Pater

Category:
Poetry