I think sitting behind a keyboard can be a security blanket.

I gave in to the idea of paying attention to what you like and letting it help you make better stuff.

I can play piano, and I write everything on piano, but I don't really feel like a piano player, necessarily.

I'm giving into my tendency to want to blur and blend the lines between art and life, and privacy and sharing.

The fact that I could sing in a way that might not be right for RADA but is right for me was a brand-new concept.

I realized that there was much more to my voice than I'd ever been led to explore and that I could make my own songs.

I can be super reclusive and hermetic, and then I can be in California and host dinner parties and drink wine. It's all me.

Being in a space that's not a studio, it kind of creates an openness of 'We can do whatever we want here; we're not on the clock.'

I'm definitely using different parts of myself, but I think when it comes down to words and melodies, I can't really force anything too much.

In every song, there is a vocal element that doesn't have any words. I wanted to play around with how emotive and expressive my voice could be.

I think that being in an extreme natural setting, and letting the natural world and what it's doing permeate your thoughts, is super-interesting and super-important.

When I got back from London, I started with a new voice teacher in the experimental wing, who trained me to have my own artistry as opposed to forcing a technique upon me.

Touring is a whole other animal for me and a whole other skill. But I'm having a lot of fun figuring all that out and switching it from internal to external and putting on a show.

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