Coming from an R&B background, I was like, 'I'm gonna make slow jams.'

I don't want to be all over the place with my style and my music, but I am experimenting.

In the bathroom, having taken my make-up off and opened my eyes, I always think there's a ghost behind me. It feels like there's a weird presence. Maybe it's my brain reacting to me without make-up.

Yes, sharing super-personal experiences is scary, but I can only get up on stage and perform it if I really connect with the music.

I was a sensitive kid.

Music became my way of processing things and a way to gain confidence.

I've been in two long-term relationships and - this sounds awful - they were really helpful for writing heartbreak. It makes good songs.

I've always been sure of my vision, but I've been in meetings where men have been talking about me like I'm not there... I've been told I should be a certain way, and I wondered if that would have been the case if I was a man.

Producing isn't my favourite bit about what I do, but the fact that I know how to do it gives me this sense of power in situations that are super male-dominated.

I want to be known for my music, and that takes time.

A couple of days out of the month, I talk to my stylist, and we just get a big chunk of looks that'll last me a while.

I'm such a control freak that camping, for me, is difficult. I can't be this crazy, carefree person that wears the same outfit for four days.

I grew up in a house full of musicians, and my mum really taught me that when you listen to an album, you respect that it's somebody's art, and that the B-sides are just as important as the singles, and we should really listen to the album all the way through the way it was intended to be listened to.

There's so many inspiring women dominating the charts, so I feel like I'm definitely a part of a wave that's just really interesting and really cool.

I know I love going to my gym - I have a whole list of things I love to do by myself without needing someone else to make me happy.

I have, like, 'Finders Keepers' fever now! Sometimes I go in the studio, and I'm like, 'That worked so well, and I wrote it in 45 minutes, so if I try wearing the same outfit and playing on the same piano, it'll happen again.'

My mum is one of my style icons!

I want to make people dance, I want to make people smile, and I want my music to get played in clubs.

My first-ever radio interview was with Annie Mac on Radio 1!

I put a song on Soundcloud, and Annie Mac made it record of the week, and a month later, I signed my record deal.

I moved from Stockholm to London, and I didn't want to work with my parents or have them help me in any way, I think just to prove to myself that I have my own talent.

I am very much married to the job.

All the buzz can be very much here today and gone tomorrow, but my focus is creating music that will last forever.

I think growing up, people want to put you in a box and label you quite often, just because it's kind of easier, I guess.