I mean, there's plenty of artists who are making R&B music, but because of their ethnicity, it's considered something else.
MiguelI think what I bring to the table overall is a sense of my own individuality, especially in the urban-male spectrum of what is here and now.
MiguelI think in a world where everyone wants to categorize and compartmentalize and rationalize, it's OK to be different.
MiguelI feel that as artists - whatever your medium is - I feel that we're watching what goes on around us and we take what we don't see, or we don't hear, or we don't feel and we do something that speaks of it; more about it, for it, or against it - whatever our perspective is - that's what our job is.
MiguelThe extremes of who I'd love to be onstage are David Bowie, Prince, and, I don't know, Bjork.
MiguelI think there's a huge parallel that affects my musical taste, and connections that have to do with my ethnic diversity and my musical tastes and the diversity of that. And it's interesting that, growing up on the circuit, it posed such a challenge, not only to me deciding what my identity was amongst my peers, but then on the music side, it was like trying to explain or convince people especially in the music industry that there was a place for what I was trying to do. But at the same time, I think it has a lot to do with timing and even me, like, understanding it.
Miguel