Her first ever Facebook status was ‘loves My Chemical Romance and Twilight’ and that, she says, was ‘the energy I was going into the internet with. It’s still a part of me.’ You can tell. Her music takes 2007 indie rock, adds a hint of Lana Del Rey and sets the resulting mix against a background of baroque orchestral sounds. It is a claustrophobic, intoxicating formula that has served her well, and she remains prolific. Next year she plans to release an album inspired by ‘political demonology’. For now there is a new single, ‘Quiet’, and then an upcoming EP entitled Five Songs For The Dysphoric that taps into her experiences as a trans person. ‘I wanted to talk about what it means to be intimate with someone when you’re not confident in your body,’ she says. ‘It’s a very alienating and strange feeling. And one that’s often misinterpreted.’ A recent break-up informed the songs; said break-up was, she tells me, ‘a big deal’, but in the end had its positives. ‘I got a pretty good EP out of it. I’m happy to have these songs out in the world and for them to symbolise that period in my life.’