I am a genderless sea creature who has been writing and studying music since I was 12.

I love songs, Patty Larkin, Sharon Stone, Mae West, and Marilyn Monroe.

Most of my friends are my friends because they inspire me.

I think that because we have these big female pop stars, people forget that women and marginalized people are so underrepresented in this business.

For the most part, it's straight white men running these labels and publishing companies.

Once I got into pop songwriting, I was kind of just ready to help other people tell their stories... I'm here to facilitate and structure and grow and make things a little more fabulous and a little more urgent.

I just want to make music that people hear, and I'm not ashamed of that.

Obviously, Gaga's one of the greatest music visionaries of our time, and Beyonce is one of the greatest visions of our time. She is a music visionary, too.

When you are born gay, you are born into a rich culture of politics, music, and art, but you are also a minority in your own home.

I'm so connected to the community that I was lucky enough to be born into.

My goal is that my makeup and style will inspire Midwestern housewives. I want there to be a breakdown of 'Justin's smoky eye' in Cosmo.

This is the dream: to make money off of what you love.

I was born into the most amazing family an underdog could be born into, and I was born into the LGBTQ community. And what a beautiful community we are. The art, the music, the fashion, the brains, the fight, the survival skills, the diversity, male, female, non-binary, Gender Non Conforming, cis, trans, femme, and all races.

I feel like there is a lot of homophobia and misogyny in the music business, and I feel like I've gotten to a place where I've broken down a lot of those doors.

I won't do press anymore unless I can talk about the homophobia and let queer people know our ideas are mainstream.

I'm using the success I've had to help other people shine.

I like to play this game where I ask people to count gay pop writers and producers they know. Everyone's always like, 'Oh, there are plenty!' But we always end up counting them on one hand.

I really want queer kids to know that our experience is universal.

The thing is, if you tell your story specifically enough, it becomes so universal. Just because you're a gay man singing an honest love song, people should know that it's about men and that they can still relate to it.

I know that it's my queer perspective that's helping people make songs that the world is listening to.

When I'm in a session with an artist, my job is to help execute their vision - so it's whatever story they're telling, and the news doesn't specifically affect that.

I really loved Kygo and Selena Gomez's 'It Ain't Me.'

If I'm hanging out with my friends or I'm working out, I'll listen to female singer-songwriters from the '90s because that's where my heart lies.

If a song I'm lucky enough to be a part of comes on the radio, it's definitely really cool and exciting, but I can't focus on anything but the song. Same if one of my songs comes on in a restaurant. I can't just carry on a conversation.

I worked at a jewelry store to pay the bills when I first moved to N.Y.C., and I always loved the phrase 'Semi Precious.' So I wanted to just call the band Semi Precious, but my dad told it was kinda sissy, so I added Weapons.

I first fell in love with music when I was five years old because of 'Annie.' And then 'The Little Mermaid' really made me want to start singing. And then the fierce, amazing women of the '90s - Alanis Morrissette, Courtney Love, Tori Amos, Ani Difranco, Paula Cole, Patty Griffin - made me want to start writing.

If you listen to Semi-Precious Weapons' last single, 'Aviation High,' you can definitely hear that even in my old band, even in the songs I was writing then, the pop influence really started to take over.

Great music is just very clear. Sonically and lyrically, you understand the point of view, you understand the melodies, you understand the vibe, and you understand the lyric pretty damn quickly. To me, that doesn't make it 'less than' - it makes it 'more than.'

I'm a walking political statement.

My mom has a big ol' crush on Arne Duncan, so I hear about and see pics of him all the time. I think he could look great in heels!

We really like L.A. because it really likes rock and roll.

Even though L.A. can be kind of tacky, when a city's big draws are The Roxy and the Viper Room, you know its pretty amazing.

I love myself. I love my friends.

In the band Semi-Precious Weapons, I got to sing, wear, and say exactly what I wanted for ten years.

All songwriters are known as 'topliners' because the vocal goes on top of the track.

A couple of days working with Joe Jonas, I thought, 'This guy is a slayer of a singer; he's really funny, goofy, and sexy. We need to write that.' And that led to 'Cake By The Ocean.'

I'm so grateful for my endless delusion.

If a song is being written for a woman, there should be a woman in the room collaborating.

I've experienced some really very obvious, direct homophobia - when I was still trying to be an artist, behind the scenes, being told to be less gay, be less feminine.

I was very lucky that my family really supported me in exploring my femininity when I was young, and so it was a joyous thing.

I really do pride myself on being able to help other people tell their stories and bring out the best in them. But I still, every song I'm writing, I still need to relate to it. I still need to find my true self in it, or else it'll feel dishonest. I mean, everything has a queer meaning as far as I'm concerned.

I like to make glamorously informed songs for glamorously intelligent people.

A lot of writers don't know what it feels like to get on stage. They don't understand the weight that songs can carry. I got a chance to play all these shows. I got a chance to define myself through music, so when it comes to helping other people figure out what they should say, I've been through it.

My artist career failed pretty miserably multiple times.

Before anything else, my favorite thing as a fan of music was to make up my own story as to what it means.

I just didn't really relate to Kurt Cobain. There was nothing very glamorous about him.

People are always quick to judge SPW because of the fact that I wear heels. For me, I just have no choice. This is just how I feel beautiful and how I feel awesome. I would just be so uncomfortable onstage if I was wearing something else.

Under-sung vocals can be very sexy because of the intimacy, but they can be just as heartbreaking for the same reason.

I wouldn't want to write a song in a pair of sneakers. I think it would be a horrible song.

When we were starting out as a band in New York, we played a concert at a small club early on and asked Lady Gaga to open for us. We were big fans, and she had the same kind of approach to music as we did: not taking everything so seriously and just having fun.