I can rock along with the best of them.

I struggled for so many years.

I think that every songwriter would give their right arm to come up with a standard that is going to be played long after they're dead.

Philanthropy is never understood by those who don't have it in their own hearts.

My mother was actually a breeder, believe it or not, and she used to name horses after some of my songs.

In my 20s, I got into giving people massages and realised I was able to encourage their bodies to heal by passing my hands over them. I'd never describe myself as a faith healer - it's just that if someone believes in this type of healing, I can help release whatever blockage it is that's preventing them healing themselves.

I regularly visualise my body from head to toe, and wait for it to tell me if there's anything wrong.

Vanity is not high on my list of priorities.

I'm not a great meat eater - I eat it twice a week. But I can't stand fish - my mother says it's because I got a fish bone stuck in my throat when I was little.

After university, I set out to see if I could make a career in music. It was a tough journey at first, but by the time I was 23 I'd been signed by A&M Records.

I made loads of English and Irish friends at university and all they wanted to do was have a good time.

The relationship between parents and children who live together is a growing one, and it shifts every day, especially during the teenage years.

Music was my first love, and at Marlborough we put bands together and sang the pop songs of the day. Although I couldn't read or write music - I still can't - I taught myself to play the guitar and piano by listening to songs and working out the chords.

I'm a strong believer in the importance of energies - ley lines, energy streams, whatever you wish to call them - within a house. They can affect your health as well as your happiness.

I've been to Australia, Russia and many of places I wanted to see as a child. But I've never visited India. I've had many invitations to play there but it hasn't worked out. People say it's beautiful, but I think I'd react badly to the poverty.

My secondary schooling was at Marlborough College, Wiltshire, so I'm fond of that part of the world. It's quintessentially English, with village greens, pubs and cricket pitches, and resonates strongly with me.

I was born in Argentina, and have lived in England, Ireland, Africa and Malta.

A lot of people think they can become world stars overnight.

If you love yourself there's plenty left for everyone else. You just have to deflect natsy things.

Most years, I do 70 or 80 concerts.

I know journalists like to think that they are read by people like me, but I don't read them.

I'm very good to my wife. I never go home.

Quite simply, to win Miss World is not a ticket to millions and I've read that so many times.

My wife and I are rock solid together and, curiously enough, always have been.

People who don't understand fighting think you need to hate somebody to beat them. But I keep hate and anger out of boxing, because it causes mistakes.

I got cut against Groves, and I couldn't see out of my eye most of the fight but it didn't hurt. Groves probably weighed 13 1/2 stone whereas I weighed 12. But he never buzzed me. It was just that cut, which looked so bad, with blood everywhere.

I'm human. When you lose, of course you're going to be upset. It's a horrible feeling.

Some fighters lose and their spirits are forever broken. A champion comes back stronger. If you're constantly dwelling on the past, 'I could have done that, I should have done this,' it doesn't help. You have to look at the situation intellectually and learn from it.

This is boxing. As fighters we know the risks, we know we are risking our health everytime you step into the ring, but it's a risk we are willing to take because we know with those risks come great reward.

There is a lot of pressure because of what my father achieved and everyone is expecting so much, but that gives me that extra drive in the gym every day to graft hard.

I want to be able to prove I can become the same or better than my father.

People ask me 'Are you copying your dad?' It is in my blood. I have got royal blood coursing through my veins. I can't help myself doing what my father did.

I am an entertainer.

Obviously, in the buildup to some fights, there's animosity and testosterone and banter. But at the end of the day, we all understand that this is a business, just two men who are trying to further their careers and provide for their families.

There shouldn't be any true malice towards your opponent.

I learned very early on once I started boxing as a kid that if you go into the ring emotionally charged you make mistakes. It's a mental game, it's a chess match, you've got to think, you've got to strategise and make tactical decisions.

I have fought fighters in the past who I don't like as people, but you have to block out any type of dislike or hate. Whatever he's done, whatever he's said, you can't be thinking about that. You just have to see him as a man that you have to outpoint, outgame, and beat on the night.

In the ring I'm a different animal.

When I'm fighting it's just search and destroy.

I've had the hardest upbringing of any fighter in England.

Having the Eubank name in England brings lots of pressure.

This is no ordinary nine to five day job and I have a 24/7 in terms of my boxing and my career as a professional sportsman.

Vegas is a wonderful place and there are a lot of things going on over there, it's a great place to have some fun, but it is also one of the best places in the world to train and to box.

I don't see a holiday as a time to break from boxing - it never stops.

Any fighter worth his salt wants to be the best and to be the best you have to fight the best.

No man is unbeatable.

So many fighters who fight Golovkin have lost before they've entered the ring.

It doesn't matter how scary someone may seem - they have two legs, two arms and a heartbeat just like me. There's no reason why I wouldn't want to fight anybody.

Saunders didn't beat me. I wasn't battered or shown-up. I made the mistake of not pressing him early, pacing myself too much because it was my first 12-round fight.

There is nothing better to do than to represent your country.