USA TODAY US Edition

Demi Lovato tells it

Her new album is a sharp look at being single, lonely and not sorry

- Maeve McDermott

There’s no quicker way to revive a sleepy pop star than to tell her she sounds like Adele.

When we caught up with Demi Lovato, she had just come from a crack-of-dawn appearance on Good Morning America to advocate for Hurricane Harvey relief and show off her new Fabletics activewear line.

Yet, even Disney Channel veterans get tired sometimes, and beneath Lovato’s unfailingl­y polite demeanor there was probably a 25-year-old who needed a nap. But she brightened at the comparison with the bigvoiced British diva on her new song, You Don’t Do It For Me Anymore, a soaring highlight on her forthcomin­g album, Tell Me You Love Me (out Friday).

“That’s, like, the best compliment ever,” Lovato says.

Lovato’s career has been defined by her role-model status. She’s a mental health and body-positivity advocate whose “be yourself at all costs” attitude pours from her biggest hits, from Cool for the Summer’s winking sexuality to her unapologet­ic new single, Sorry Not Sorry.

The difference­s between her 2015 album, Confident, and her forthcomin­g release are clear in their representa­tive titles. Written after several public breakups, including from longtime boyfriend Wilmer Valderrama, Tell Me You Love Me is a snapshot of twentysome­things’ relationsh­ips, including the sexting, friends with benefits and late-night calls so prevalent in modern dating.

“I’m single, and I’m 25 years old, and I’m living by myself, and so I wanted to write about it,” she says. “Some of the perks include not taking life, or anything, too seriously, and just having fun. And then sometimes it gets lonely.”

As for the songs’ subjects, Lovato confirms that the characters and experience­s in her music aren’t fiction.

“I don’t think that any of my songs are necessaril­y ‘made up,’ ” she says. “I relate to all of them through personal experience­s. There are times when there are people that I write about and I don’t want it to sound too obvious, so I’ll disguise it a little bit.”

“And for the most part, my fans know what’s up,” she adds.

Considerin­g the press’ near-obsession with Lovato’s sex-positive songwritin­g, lyrics like “lucky for you, I got all these daddy issues” seem designed to raise eyebrows. Lovato plans to take her soul-bearing a step further with a documentar­y arriving on YouTube Oct. 17 called Demi Lovato: Simply Complicate­d.

Spending months with a film crew wasn’t always easy for Lova- to, but as she explains, she feels she owes it to her fans to be honest.

“Some of the ways that I got comfortabl­e with the cameras is knowing in those moments when I’m being vulnerable, or when I’m opening up, I know that it’s going to help someone who may be going through the same thing I am,” she says. “So just keeping that in mind, in the back of my head, when you’re filming is important.”

While Lovato wouldn’t share more about Simply Complicate­d’s intimate details, fans can expect the documentar­y to address her sexuality. After Cool for the Summer hinted at her same-sex experience­s, questions about her sexual preference­s became commonplac­e in interviews. And while Lovato has stayed vague about how she labels her sexuality, that hasn’t stopped gossip sites from hunting down details on her love life, with paparazzi snapping her holding hands with a woman at Disneyland this month.

When a recent Huffington Post article slammed Lovato for refusing to talk about her sexuality, she clapped back on Twitter, reaffirmin­g that her personal business is just that.

“If you’re that curious about my sexuality, watch my documentar­y. But I don’t owe anybody anything,” she wrote.

Lovato also has spoken openly about her mental health struggles in the past, but it’s clear that today she prefers to focus on her new charity project, which fosters artistic projects for refugees.

“I’m working with Global Citizen and we’re working together to help displaced people and refugees in Iraq,” she says. “We’re working to put together an art system so that it can help them heal and use music, or whatever art form they want. Art helps people, and we’re putting together an initiative to work together to help people be able to express their emotions through art.”

After inspiring fans by speaking candidly about her mental health struggles, she hopes to similarly tackle perception­s of refugees and other displaced people.

“What I don’t think people realize is that these people have gone through so much and they’re just like us,” she says. “I think it’s important to remember that they’re human, and no matter what their religion or skin color or what type of person they are, they’re human and it’s important that we do whatever we can to help them.”

“I don’t think that any of my songs are necessaril­y ‘made up,’ I relate to all of them through personal experience­s.”

 ?? CHARLEY GALLAY, GETTY IMAGES, FOR SPOTIFY ??
CHARLEY GALLAY, GETTY IMAGES, FOR SPOTIFY
 ?? CHARLEY GALLAY, GETTY IMAGES, FOR SPOTIFY ?? Demi Lovato’s new album, Tell Me You Love Me, is out Friday.
CHARLEY GALLAY, GETTY IMAGES, FOR SPOTIFY Demi Lovato’s new album, Tell Me You Love Me, is out Friday.
 ?? DENNIS LEUPOLD ?? YouTube documentar­y Demi Lovato: Simply Complicate­d arrives Oct. 17.
DENNIS LEUPOLD YouTube documentar­y Demi Lovato: Simply Complicate­d arrives Oct. 17.

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