I'm never not in the studio creating; it's like my second home.
— Dinah Jane
We're not always going to be these bubbly, happy girls. We're real women, too.
My music's matured so much, I don't have to create any barriers.
I watched my great-grandmother be buried on FaceTime.
I fell in love with music at the age of four, and I remember my grandmother being on the piano teaching me some church songs, some primary songs.
I've always been interested in Mariah Carey, Beyonce, and Leona Lewis.
I love Sam Smith a lot.
Being in a group, you don't really get to give an ounce of who you are as a solo artist.
During any performance, I love to connect with the crowd and hope fans leave my show feeling happy.
'Reflection' and 'Going Nowhere' would've been great singles because that's the exact sound that we wanted to achieve.
I was just grateful for the fact that I was able to repay my parents for their sacrifices throughout my career.
I love the stage more than the studio.
My mother is a singer herself.
At the age of 11 is when I took my love & interest for singing a bit more serious.
I love listening to Tori Kelly.
I'm an ice cream lover, but anytime it's show day, I have to cancel out all dairy because it isn't good for vocalists.
I feel like sometimes we just need to speak more about what we're going through.
At 15, 16, life is being tossed at you.
When I first got started, I used to say I just want to stay in the studio, I want to make good music, I want to sing my heart out, and I didn't think I'd have people following me to a grocery store or following me home or stuff like that.
I always sang Leona Lewis covers, and if you know her songs, she's not just singing your average easy song; she's going off the majority of the time.
I feel like people expect a lot from me.
I started using this outlet of creativity - you know, going to the studio, writing, meeting these writers and producers - as the best form of representing myself to my fullest potential.