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I have an instinct about the way I want to play my saxophone. And that way, when somebody says, ‘Hey, I don't really like what you're doing,’ I'm going, ‘ And?’ Why would I even care? Is that supposed to change anything that I'm doing? No! Plus, the big rep is inside. I got reps of playing with Liberace and Sammy Davis Jr. … I got lots of reps of me playing in clubs, where people are reacting to my music. “You know, I got lots of reps of people telling me how good I am - and not just people, but people like Miles Davis and George Benson and great musicians, Stan Getz, saying that they enjoy my music. A lot of reps may makes me makes you strong,” Kenny explains affably. “Well, the secret is there's a lot of reps of all the good stuff. So, what’s the secret to having such a good attitude and Teflon-coated ego? Kenny has always seemed at peace with his place in pop-culture history, and he claims there was never a time, not even early in his career, where the flak hurt his feelings. And it hasn't changed my opinion about anything yet.’” I've seen this and heard this for decades.
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“When I saw it, I said, ‘Penny, you don't have to warn me.
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“There's a lot of critics in the movie that voice their opinion, and it's not things that I have been heard for the last 40 years,” Kenny says with a smile and a shrug. As usual, he took the criticism in self-deprecating stride. But while Kenny says it was “very kind of her to do that,” the caveat was unnecessary.
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The musician, whose full name is Kenneth Bruce Gorelick, tells Yahoo Entertainment that Lane actually warned him that the first 15 minutes of the film, in which various jazz critics, historians, and scholar dismiss his music as “wallpaper,” would be especially brutal viewing for him. In the cold open of the new HBO documentary Listening to Kenny G, director Penny Lane explains that she set out to learn why the lite-jazz/adult-contemporary saxophonist is so polarizing, and why his success - he’s the biggest instrumental artist of all time, with 75 million records sold - downright angers so many haters.