We write the song, then it gets played for the artist, and they somehow fall in love with it and go back in and make it their own.

It might crush a lot of people, but I've never been in the room with an artist that I've written a song for.

I rolled up my sleeves and said, 'I want to make a mark on this world.'

I'm proud of my work and how far I've come, and I'm proud of the way that I did it.

I've had situations where producers would be like, 'Could you meet me? Take the train; don't tell your parents.'

I want to be Kanye and do what he does musically. I'm very fearless.

I'm very tomboy, and I'm inspired by hip hop artists.

I view myself as a male artist.

I have a lot of respect for Eminem and Rihanna. They are both very real in their music.

I have never spoken to Eminem. I've never even spoken to him once.

I just want to be a little more real. Maybe I'm a little bit darker than others.

We don't walk around wearing candy stuff all day or colorful stuff. It's like, I walk around wearing black.

I'm very obsessed with not being perfect.

It's tough hearing your voice on the radio, on a chorus, and knowing that people think it's another artist.

Music changes so fast, and we're in a singles market.

I want to release six songs, let people listen to those, let them chill for a second, do a tour, release another six songs, chill for a second and then take my favorite four, put them on the album, and add some more.

I just respect Kanye as an artist.

The most important thing to me is that it's all really raw.

One of my biggest inspirations was Alanis Morissette's 'Jagged Little Pill.'

I think what people get confused about is that they want to label me as this EDM girl, but a lot of this stuff is genre-less.

I don't judge people on their personal lives.

Music is truly universal and has no boundaries.

From Amitabh Bachchan to Ranveer Singh, I have sung for different generations of actors.

People laugh at me, and that's fine. I laugh at myself, too.