Abigail Washburn Quotes
Born: November 10, 1977
Abigail Washburn is a visionary banjoist, singer, and cultural bridge-builder whose life’s work harmonizes the raw energy of American folk traditions with the ancient spirit of Chinese philosophy. Known for her belief that music is a primal call to action, she urges people to move from passive dreaming into bold, purposeful living. Her legacy is one of fearless creativity—using art to dissolve borders and ignite change. Washburn’s quotes resonate because they speak to the soul’s deepest hunger: to act with intention, embrace uncertainty, and build a better world through small, courageous steps. She inspires us to turn our convictions into motion.
Abigail Washburn Quotes (30)
"I reside in a new colony for the Chinese-singing banjo player, with a population of one. At least I have something I have to do with my life."
— Abigail Washburn"I would say I've always lived creativity, but now I - I do it with an intention that's got a completely different power."
— Abigail Washburn"One thing I carried my whole life, especially from my grandparents in Chicago, was a huge idealism for the world."
— Abigail Washburn"As a child, I went to peace and ERA marches on the back of my mom and grandmother. Through them I learned that I wanted to find a way to make the world a more kind, compassionate place."
— Abigail Washburn"In China, I realized that if you visit often enough and learn the language, you will be assimilated, but you'll still be kept at arm's length; you'll always be looked on as a foreigner."
— Abigail Washburn"You can enjoy many different types of music. I think that's something more Americans should think about."
— Abigail Washburn"I feel like my kind of music is a big pot of different spices. It's a soup with all kinds of ingredients in it."
— Abigail Washburn"I really believe in the power of music."
— Abigail Washburn"My whole drive is to make sure that music is a common space where we search for beauty and share it. It needs to be louder than any conversation. That's where we have to go as a human race."
— Abigail Washburn"'Halo' I wrote with my grandpa in his nursing home. When I went to visit him, he'd often comment on my halo. But of course, I couldn't see. And he always - he had pictures of Jesus with these beautiful halos. And so I asked him if he'd write a song with me about Jesus' halo."
— Abigail Washburn"I feel like the one insight that's extremely comforting to me about the world is that we all share the same pool of emotion that we draw from."
— Abigail Washburn"I'm, I guess you could say, the Chinese-speaking, banjo-picking girl."
— Abigail Washburn"Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' speech always sends me down some path, some trajectory of some creative idea."
— Abigail Washburn"I've noticed that the more I open up, the more I learn."
— Abigail Washburn"My parents played the radio, but music was never an obsession or something that I thought I could call a career."
— Abigail Washburn"I do get around. Geographically, that is."
— Abigail Washburn"I played piano and was always in the choir. I tried to play flute because all the pretty girls played flute."
— Abigail Washburn"For most Americans, my Chinese music feels like a novelty, and it's not what it is for me."
— Abigail Washburn"I have a general sense of mission, and I intuitively know when something is influencing that mission. I think this is what I'm supposed to be doing. Doors keep opening. In the end, it's the best use of my skills. I've finally consented to the idea that I'm an artist."
— Abigail Washburn"I believe in the old, because it shows us where we come from - where our souls have risen from. And I believe in the new, because it gives us the opportunity to create who we are becoming."
— Abigail Washburn"I believe in music because it has the power of change."
— Abigail Washburn"You have to try things you're really afraid of, even if you pee yourself a little bit."
— Abigail Washburn"One of my favorite albums in the world is Bruce Springsteen's 'Nebraska.' Each song has this very distinct character who has something profound to say."
— Abigail Washburn"I've moved around so much my whole life, and I've gotten so used to being the Other in situations - the foreigner, the outsider. The first time I've ever felt like there was no separation between me and the other elements was in music."
— Abigail Washburn"I do see music as complete refuge. It's a universal home, complete common ground between everyone; it comes from a place that has no nation and no boundaries around it."
— Abigail Washburn"In some ways, my most comfortable feeling has been that of being an outsider coming in, but over the years I've tired of that and I'm ready to feel at home. That's what music gives me: a feeling of absolute home."
— Abigail Washburn"I would still describe China as a vast, invigorating puzzle that will never make sense to my western upbringing."
— Abigail Washburn"I had no intention of becoming a performer, and yet under miraculous circumstances I was brought into the music industry fold. If divine powers hadn't intervened, I'd still be living in China working in some area of Sino-American comparative law."
— Abigail Washburn"China was the first time I truly felt like an outsider. I fell in love with the process of trying to become intimate with the culture."
— Abigail Washburn"I'm no ethnomusicologist. There is a connection between the five-note scale used both in traditional Chinese music and the blues, but I don't really understand it. All I know is, whenever I play with Chinese musicians, we seem to belong to the same musical gene pool."
— Abigail Washburn