My only interest is in sharing great music with more and more people.
— Simon Rattle
I believe if you're not completely in love with what you're doing, you'd better find another profession.
Orchestras are like people. They're the sonic embodiment of their community.
The jazz records come out a lot. You find that with many musicians - we don't listen to our own music for relaxation.
It's interesting: composers can be very funny ducks.
The better the orchestra, often the harder it is to conduct, not the other way around.
We need to bring music to the people, even to those who normally do not listen to classical music.
With these big Wagner pieces, if I haven't started three years before, I'm screwed. You need time to look at the piece again and again and again, and then, like some fantastic casserole or spaghetti sauce, put it back in the fridge and let the flavours get together.
'Parsifal' is one of the great examples in art of a work that transcends the personality of the man who wrote it.
As a Liverpool boy, it is impossible not to think of the Beatles' question, 'Will you still need me when I'm 64?'
In my mid-twenties, I was with a conducting career, but I had never been to university and I wanted to. There were things I wanted to study in depth. I also wanted to see if I could survive without music.
Liverpool is off the side of the known universe, and it always was. New York is the only other place comparable.
I was a harpsichordist in my teens, and there was a bunch of us in Liverpool who got together every week to play Bach.
I think the English are an unbelievably musical nation and always have been.
As a nation, we English tend to be self-deprecating, looking down on ourselves. We're insular but also flexible, whereas in Germany, it's a case of besser wissen - we know better. That's very Deutsch. People are never frightened to tell you what you're doing wrong, in a way that would never happen in England.
I love Mozart, but I often make a terrible hash of it.
I was thrilled that Sadiq Khan was so in support of the idea of culture being at the centre of a city and the idea that it is everyone's right. It can't be a matter of privilege or chance. It should be something everyone can have in their life, and that means knowing what it is.
I first heard Mahler's second symphony aged 11 in Liverpool, and it inspired me to become a conductor.
There is a mysterious way in which orchestras keep a sense of their history and what they've done. I still listen to the L.A. Philharmonic and feel that Giulini was there.
One of the most extraordinary and all-encompassing forms of communication is music. It reaches places that all kinds of other things cannot reach. I'll put my cards on the table: I think it is our greatest language.
The grapevine in England is an extraordinary thing. When there is a really brilliant young composer or soloist, we all hear about it.
Some of my favorite music in the world is Haydn. I had a sabbatical one year and made myself one promise: to play a different Haydn piano sonata each day - they are inexhaustible treasures.
We have to be evangelists for music. We couldn't just be high priests of music.
I think Beethoven means dissonances to be more stressed than consonances - it's the shock tactician in him.
Nobody has Francis Bacon on their walls in their house - or very few people - but sometimes people listen to Beethoven as though it was background and a comfort, and I think that is very dangerous.
'Career' is not a musical term.
The music lovers of London and the country deserve to have something where orchestras can flourish. You have no idea how wonderful an orchestra like the London Symphony Orchestra can sound in a great concert hall.
Yes, I was a weird duck, no doubt.
If you receive a whole string of bad reviews, you have to say, 'O.K., maybe there's something here we should pay attention to.'
Sometimes, musicians worry too much about how beautifully they are playing.
Conductors start getting good when everybody else retires.
American economists can't understand the German fear of inflation and the effects of inflation when dealing with the world economic crisis. They wonder why Germany pursues such a different course - 'Why can't they agree with us?' I would have thought it was fairly obvious.
I've always loved French music. My parents adored it; my father played it on the piano.
In England, unless I am mistaken, I think some of the politicians who love classical music and opera are a bit loath to be seen there in case people think it is elitist. That is a real shame because it also means we are not allowing our politicians a hinterland that an earlier generation, a Denis Healey, would have taken for granted.
One of the most difficult things in opera is for people to suspend disbelief.
Every orchestra has its own sound.
There are a few great orchestras in the world, thank goodness. Although some people do put them in ranking order, it's not like a snooker match. Each orchestra has different things to offer.
I'd be much more likely to watch the latest Tarantino movie than to listen to a Mahler symphony.
I've always had a profound conviction that great music is about joy, even in the face of tragedy.
You would never train people to play football by telling them to watch football. You make them play football.
Beethoven was always too much. He's not slightly anything - he's very everything.
Conducting 'Tristan' is like floating in amniotic fluid, but having worked on it for three months, I now know why people who go near it go so strange.
Always the journey, never the destination.
Passionate musicians only come from passionate five-year-olds.
You don't like Liverpool: you either loathe it or you love it. And I don't know anyone who loathes it and comes from it.
What really counts isn't whether your instrument is Baroque or modern: it's your mindset.
'Pelleas et Melisande' is one of the saddest and most upsetting operas ever written. If you love the opera as I do, then you love it to pieces, obsessively.
The necessity for rules and strictness is a way of dealing with an enormously powerful impulse: Germans are among the most emotional people on the planet. Maybe it has to do with the fact that, as a nation, they are always drawn back to nature and the forest.
Germans have an understanding of history and cannot allow themselves to forget it. It may be a curse, but in some ways, it's a blessing. It makes them cautious.
I think we will find more and more ways in which technology invades our artistic spaces, so music is something you will need more than ever because it is there in time and in space and for that moment only.