“My bedroom is my safe space,” beabadoobee tells Apple Music of the place where she’s written her music ever since 2017, when her father gave her her first guitar. “It’s where everything started. It’s seen me cry, it’s seen me get really happy.” You’ll find all those moods in the Philippines-born, London-raised singer-songwriter’s deeply confessional, ultra-nostalgic indie pop—from the first song she ever wrote (2017’s grainy “Coffee,” which unexpectedly went viral and landed her a record deal) to 2020’s raw-edged debut, ‘Fake It Flowers’, on which beabadoobee—real name Beatrice Laus—dissects the thorny business of growing up. In her moving Up Next film, the artist takes us inside that childhood bedroom to reveal how music healed her after the turbulence of her teenage years—which included self-harm and being kicked out of school—and how she wants young women to feel empowered by her sound: “I want it to feel like a warm blanket,” she says. Watch the film and interview, along with selections from the rest of the artists in the Up Next series: https://apple.co/-UpNextbeabadoobee
Subscribe to Apple Music: https://apple.co/AppleMusicYT
Follow Apple Music:
Instagram: https://instagram.com/applemusic
Facebook: https://facebook.com/applemusic
Twitter: https://twitter.com/applemusic
Watch more Apple Music:
What’s New: https://apple.co/2VFatTU
Apple Music Up Next: https://apple.co/2MLktXE
Interviews: https://apple.co/32WnrPV
What’s Trending: https://apple.co/2Meq89t
Apple Music lets you listen to millions of songs, online or off, totally ad-free. Create and share your own playlists, get exclusive content and personalized recommendations, and listen to radio hosted by artists streaming live or on demand. http://apple.co/SUBSCRIBE
#beabadoobee #UpNext #AppleMusic
source