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Ruel

At nineteen years of age, Ruel has learnt to trust himself. 

“It’s exactly the music I wanted to write,” says the Sydney-bred singer-songwriter of the music he’s been prepping for his debut album. “It’s exactly what I had in my head. It’s me executing my ideas, instead of trying to execute other people’s ideas in my way.” 

In early 2020 while holed up in LA to expand on five songs he’d written during a 2019 stint in Paris with Sarah Aarons, Ruel found himself on course – fresh off a world tour and completing some “pretty R&B pop singles” to finish his much-anticipated album. Then the pandemic hit. 

“It still would have been me, because I was getting better as a writer and becoming more self-sufficient,” says Ruel of the interrupted sessions. “But it definitely would have been a different sound.” 

Ruel set those initial five songs free in late 2020 as the Bright Lights, Red Eyes EP, featuring the sultry lope of ‘As Long As You Care’, ‘Distance’ and melancholic groove of ‘Say It Over (feat. Cautious Clay)’. 

Since debuting in 2017 at the age of 14 on producer M-Phazes ‘Golden Years’ and becoming the youngest ever artist to appear on triple j’s Like a Version, the bio of Ruel van Dijk is bonkers. 

He’s released three EPs; toured the world; been hailed by the likes of Elton John; shared stages with Khalid, Shawn Mendes and played Tyler, the Creator’s Camp Flog Gnaw festival; had five platinum records, billion streams and 1.4 million Instagram followers; sold out the Sydney Opera House (twice); launched his own 24hr experimental online television show, and is generally touted as the next global pop star in waiting. 

In his latest dancefloor-ready single, ‘Growing Up is ______’, a neon-drenched earworm that announces Ruel’s newfound confidence to articulate his innermost stories and make them universal. Co-written with Julian Bunetta (One Direction, Jessie Ware, Jason Derulo), Ruel sings “I wasn’t trying to let you down / I was just working my shit out,” before an anthemic chorus bounces between the mundane (“smoke a dart”) and profound (“question everything you thought”) reflections familiar to anyone up late flicking between screens, friends, cities and responsibilities. 

“Songs don’t feel finished until I’m playing them live,” says Ruel. “Like, it’s crazy how different regions of the world shout back different lyrics at you. Playing to a room full of people who relate to them is one of the best feelings in the world. That to me is success. It’s been a lot of hard work to get there. But when I look back, now I see I was still learning the ropes. Now it’s like, ‘Okay time to bring home my sound.’ I can’t wait.” 

Photo credit: Michelle Grace Hunder

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