What are the Beautiful Lies the title of your latest album refer to?
For me it means lying to yourself. A lot of the album is about growing up – and not wanting to at the same time. It’s about me moving away and learning to be independent but also feeling quite nostalgic, pretending that nothing is going to change.
You have toured the world, recorded three albums and have over 400 million views on YouTube all by the age of 20. It’s a different life from that of most teenagers.
I think I grew up a bit faster. All of a sudden I was touring with people a lot older than me, some of them were in their 30s, some of them were and I was 16. That was quite strange because they were my closest friends. But in a way it put me behind people my own age at the same time because I wasn’t experiencing what they might have been – going to festivals, parties, college and university. I didn’t learn any of that or know how to talk about it.
But since you’re already a veteran in the industry your songs are able to express how it feels to be at an age when it’s usually impossible to express how it feels.
I’ve been writing about love and heartbreak since I was eight years old and I definitely hadn’t experienced any of that. It is like a release. When I play the piano it’s because I feel like I have to – I have to get something out.