Music saved me from a really dark road.

I always play barefoot. I can't play with shoes on.

That's pretty much all I do - skate, surf, and jam.

I learnt everything to do with music in my own time.

I'm actually a massive dork; people just don't know that.

I find it hard to settle into a normal, routine environment.

It would be arrogant to come to music only thinking about success.

Music draws me in. As soon as I hear it, I'm there. I'm stuck in it.

My goal is to just be able to play as many instruments as I possibly can.

I've been living a healthier life and, therefore, writing healthier music.

I have a little pocket journal. I just put the pen on the paper and just go.

I reckon I'd be probably, like, in the gutter somewhere if I didn't have music.

I just have this real love and connection with what I'm doing when I play music.

You can impact on people with music, and I love that because music impacts on me.

I don't really have music goals. It's just a huge field I want to dedicate my life to.

Music is the embodiment of my soul. When I play, I'm not performing a song: I'm becoming it.

I started getting RSI in my wrists and my elbow from playing really hard, so I started looping.

I've got an awesome career happening, and I absolutely am so stoked with how it's all worked out.

You only have one thing in your mind, and that is your mind; once that's gone, your whole reality is distorted.

I'm just all for equal rights and stuff like that, but I'm not like one of those 'Yay empowerment' type of people.

I think when you have one song that does really well, people love you from that song, or they hate you from that song.

I have learnt my boundaries and what I need to do to preserve my energy and not give out too much of myself every night.

I kind of just got right into playing music because I could kind of stop thinking when I was concentrating on playing the guitar.

I love the fact that there are so many people who have come to appreciate what I'm doing. That is just the best feeling in the world.

I love Erykah Badu. Every time I listen to her music, I'm, like, laying out all the instruments in the song, like, how I would loop it.

I've got a lot of pedals and a lot of knobs that need to be switching around during my performance, so I've taught my toes how to do that.

I can live on the road, no worries, because my life is scheduled, but when I come home to myself, that's what I'm worried about, finding the balance.

Pretty much everybody loves music. Like, there are those weird people that don't like music, and I don't really understand that at all, to be honest.

Being able to play all over the world to different audiences and have them sing my lyrics back to me, even if they can't speak the same language, is crazy.

I construct myself and do things how I want to do them, because your artistry is a very precious thing - it's ultimately your whole life if you want it to be.

My mum pushed me to get a normal job when I finished school, and I just wasn't into that at all. So I hit the street and started busking and making my own way.

I love San Francisco for the music culture. There's this vibe there that I can't find anywhere else in the world. Easily one of the best places on the sea coast.

I never necessarily played the music I listen to. I've always liked a lot of soul, roots-reggae, alternative psych-rock, and I feel like, with age, that's kind of come.

Music is multi-dimensional: it's all in the feeling. Sometimes I feel like looping; sometimes I don't. Sometimes I want to strip it back, play instruments I've never played before.

I wrote 'Jungle' in my bedroom when I was having a manic time with a particular girl. Everyone thinks it's this really upbeat song, but it's not; it was just a really manic time, so I wrote a song about it.

If you get the chance to be a Bourke Street busker, you actually have to do an audition in front of a council panel. You get a roster every week that has your busking shifts on it - I'm serious: it's an actual job.

It's like being in a trance, like I get this electric current through my fingertips. Sometimes I shake. People say I look like Hendrix when I'm about to rip a solo because I move my shoulders like he does and do the chewing.

I chose busking because I didn't want to be working for someone else. I wanted to work as I am. I feel like you ultimately do have a choice if you have your vision. So, I had a vision forever that I was going to play music. And there was no stopping that.

A lot of marathon runners access flow state. That's why it's so addictive: because they just get into this state where they're just completely one - they are in complete oneness. That's what happens to me when I play music and, I suppose, a lot of other people, too, which is why we do it.

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