I'll flip a stupid tire. But I ain't running.
— Brantley Gilbert
A friend is someone who supports you. And these people are buying tickets at outrageous ticket prices. If that ain't support, I don't know what is.
I'm old school. We're from a small town in Georgia, and I think if we do pictures before the wedding, I think I'm gonna be blindfolded.
What you see is what you get, and the majority of people in my life that loan me clothes know that they've never seen me in a suit.
I write about things and put things into my albums that I don't talk to people about. I don't hold back or sugarcoat anything.
If I read a script in the future that I feel like I could have a little fun with or that reflects me well, it may be one of those things that I try out. But, of course, music's my number one priority.
It's been cool to catch up, but I think I'm done with my exes. To be honest, I went out with flying colors on the majority of them.
If I'm down about something or having problems with something, I can write it down and get it out.
I always knew I wanted to be a performer. I started playing when I was in third grade, but I wasn't very good at all.
I still live in the same town where I grew up.
It's a little less stressful as a support act, because the headliner carries the majority of the weight. But as a headliner, we get to play a little bit longer.
I don't try to be somebody I'm not.
I try to just encompass the entire feeling and emotion behind the song the best way possible, and if that's 100,000 screaming guitars right in your face, then that's what's going down.
Most of my rings are not expensive at all; they're just things that remind me of people that gave 'em to me. And they all have their own stories, their own meanings.
There's nothing like having somebody that loves every single bit of you, and that you love the same way, to actually, really share it with.
She's definitely an angel sent from above. How can that not rub off on a man? What can I say? I'm a mama's boy.
I don't need anything to have a good time or be a hell-raiser. I was born one.
Cardio's not really my deal.
Those people are the lifeblood of what we do. We don't have fans. We have friends.
Some people wear their heart on their sleeve; I do that in more ways than one.
Don't get me wrong. There's always situations where when it gets bigger than me, it's time to go talk to mama and daddy and God.
I'm as honest as I can possibly be when I write.
I'm not too good at being fake or being somebody else.
The girls from my hometown are so over me.
If I'm ever having a good time, I'll write about it so I'll remember it.
I'm sticking true to my roots.
Not to take anything away from artists who don't write their own songs, but it's always been important to me to make sure it's my story.
We try to put on the same show regardless of what stage or platform we're on.
I don't write about anything I haven't been through.
I just sit down and write the best song for the best moment, and however it comes out, it is what it is.
Being on stage and on a motorcycle are two of the only places I feel comfortable and free. Those are my happy places.
I just hope my songs mean enough to people. And I feel like you have to live to learn.
I think I definitely get my soft side from my mother.
You meet people in the business and wonder how compassionate they are.
We've got a lot of friends. We take care of them because they take care of us.
It's real easy in a lot of businesses for your head to swell up, and you become somebody else. So that's one of my main goals in the business - to continue to be me.
My fiancee's the one that's picture worthy.
The first time I went to Sturgis, I remember thinking, 'This motorcycle thing, this is me.'
Songwriting has always been close to me.
We're gonna raise some big bucks and breed 'em and that sorta thing. Pretty excited about that.
I sing about the things that I don't have conversations about.
It's not just music. To me, it's songwriting more than anything. A lot of people say it's expression, but to me, it's more than that.
I've been asked a million times to move to Nashville, but I just can't seem to do it.
For me, a show's a show. I try to put on the best show I can for whatever audience or time slot I get.
I tell everybody, 'If you want to get to know me, if you listen to those three records, you'll have a really good idea.' They were released at different time periods in my life, and those are the things I was going through.
Looking back, we had the hard time, but the privilege, of actually coming up playing biker bars and little bitty college bars.
I don't sit down to write a number one hit. I'm not that good at my job - I don't know how to do that.
Every bit of joy in my heart, you know, every smile on my face is yours. It's awesome to be able to share that with somebody.
Fame and money and all that - you hear people say it a lot, but they don't mean a thing to me.
I wanted to make sure that if somebody special did come along, I was the kind of man that a woman like her would deserve.