"I don’t have any right to complain.. When you look at the 8 billion people on the planet, a reasonably affluent caucasian cis-gendered male public figure musician is not necessarily the first person you think of as having valid criticisms about how they’re being treated” - Moby says in a Guardian interview. He is about to release a new album next month - orchestral reworkings of his old hits - as well as a new documentary about his life going from "out of control, utterly entitled, self-involved drink and drug addict" who missed his own mother's funeral because he got drunk, to the producer of philharmonic pieces.

"Things happen in childhood that both form us and break us. And then in adulthood, we try to basically fix the ways in which we were broken as children" Moby says PopMatters in a very candid interview. He just published an autobiography 'Then it Fell Apart', where he describes how childhood traumas "lead us to […]