On the eve of 20-year-old singer-songwriter Dylan Fraserās first festival back as a performer, Neighbourhood Weekender earlier this month, he was battling a chest infection. Typical. Life seems to operate almost entirely on sodās law nowadays and for Fraser, the prospect of being unwell for his back-to-live debut must come as a damning blow. To make matters worse, his performance at the festival was the first of a run of gigs to plug tracks from his upcoming EP, āThe World Isnāt Big When You Know How It Worksā.
But thereās no way that Fraser would allow sickness to stop his moment. He dug deep, pulled himself out of the pit of despair and faced up to what he now says was a āterrifyingā experience. He was ready to start reaping the rewards of a fanbase, no matter the fear or, indeed, the Manchester rain. A fitting moment given that the new EP is an exploration full of tentative first steps, the singer figuring out the world as he is āthrown into itā.
Pulling inspiration from all sorts of genres and artists, like Nine Inch Nails (āI love what Trent Reznor doesā), Radiohead and Joni Mitchell, the body of work is one that matches its creatorās mindset. The sons are often dark and brooding, with euphoric rock choruses and Thom Yorke-aping electronic squeaks, but also packed with mellifluous vocals and lyrics that ruminate upon the inner-workings of the Bathgate-born Fraserās head. He says that the early stages of his career have been lonely; itās an isolating, often mentally arduous task being an artist who writes from a place of honesty, after all.
And it was during the pandemic that Fraserās career started to take off, growing his online fanbase as the lockdowns went by. But as music returns to the stage and fans become more than just Instagram profiles and statistics, itās all starting to come together for Fraser. He just had to get over that chest infection first.
Prior to the release of āThe World Isnāt Big When You Know How It Worksā, Dylan Fraser sits down with NME to talk his new EP, career anxieties, and finding his feet as an artist during the pandemic.
Tapping into who you are is at the heart of what you create. How is your new EP autobiographical?
āIām just looking at my own headspace a lot. I get pretty bad anxiety and it really can be a super heavy thing on my life. When a situationās presented to me, I don’t just think of one scenario; I think Iām too hyper-aware in that I analyse everything, and sometimes things can be very overwhelming. I just think weāre thrown into this world and at some point, you lose your naiveness ā so I think this project is me trying to make sense of it all.ā
Why do you think itās important to write from a place of honesty?
āI think itās the only way I know how to do it. Theyāre the songs that I connect to. I like darker, deeper, more emotional stuff because I can relate to it. I donāt listen to happy music. Weirdly, the darker, sad stuff is what makes me happy and gives me that release.ā
How has growing up in Bathgate informed the music you write?
āI am a bit of an introvert, so I didn’t have loads of friends growing up. I just stayed in my room and had lots of friends on the internet instead ā it was kind of sad. I don’t know how much of my sound relates to Bathgate because I grew up online ā and thatās how I discovered Tyler, the Creator when I was young and a lot of American rap. So I donāt know if Bathgate has shaped how my sound sounds, but I think itās given me a lot of space to discover different sounds that I wouldn’t have.ā
Is it easy for you to see how far you have come as a musician?
āNo. Iām very self-critical, and I find it hard to focus on the wins and a lot of the time I end up focussing on stuff that isnāt happening yet or what I think I need to be doing. Iām ambitious, but at the same time, I need to get better at being like, āNo good stuff is happeningā
“I just feel really grateful to be doing what Iām doing, but I don’t know if itās fully sunk in yet. I think that when I start doing more live stuff it will feel a bit more real, because thatās the part that I feel Iām missing right now ā itās all just statistics and numbers online. I know that theyāre real people, but itās just a completely different experience once you see that face-to-face.ā

You gained so much traction during the pandemic. How did it feel building a fanbase without being able to interact with fans?
āItās been weird because it feels very real and very not real at the same time. I think the thing that has kept me going is that I really love having conversations with the people who support me and my music. I have a WhatsApp group with a bunch of cool people who like my stuff and we all just have conversations about mental health, and sometimes the most random, funny shit as well. I think thatās whatās kept me sane through it all is being like, āOh, I have a bunch of new friends and we can all relate to the same kind of musicā.ā
Has the gradual re-opening of the live sector over recent months been daunting for you as people were about to get their first proper glimpse of you as an artist?
āNo, itās fucking terrifying ā youāre spot on with it. Iād done my first show back, and it was more of a stripped back set, and it was fucking terrifying. But once I was out there, I realised that everyone in that room was just there for the same thing: to enjoy music, and it wasnāt a place of judgement.ā
Why is now the right time for people to listen to Dylan Fraser?
āI think right now is the right time because Iām trying to be as honest as I can and break down situations about the world and mental health. Iām just having fun with [my music] and taking inspiration from a bunch of different places. I donāt know if thereās a reason that you should listen to me, but please do. Because Iāve put a lot of work into this and Iām just trying to make cool, interesting stuff.ā
Is the new EP exactly what you want to put out as a musician, or do you feel like youāre still finding your feet as an artist?
āThereās so much that I’ve still not done that I still want to do. But I think right now this is like a good place for my music to be.ā
Dylan Fraserās new EP, ‘The World Isnāt Big When You Know How It Works’, is out September 17 via Asylum/Atlantic
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