Cosmo Jarvis
Harrison Cosmo Krikoryan Jarvis (born September 1, 1989), known professionally as Cosmo Jarvis, is a British-American actor, musician, and filmmaker.[1][2] Born in Ridgewood, New Jersey, to an Armenian-American mother and an English father who worked as a merchant seaman, Jarvis moved to Plymouth, England, as a baby and was raised primarily in Totnes, Devon.[1][3] He left school early and began pursuing creative endeavors independently, eventually relocating to London around 2013 to enter the film industry.[1] Jarvis first gained recognition as a musician, releasing his debut album Humasyouhitch/Sonofabitch in 2009, followed by works such as Is the World Strange or Am I Strange? (2011) and Think Bigger (2012).[4] His breakthrough single "Gay Pirates," released in 2011, amassed over two million views on YouTube and showcased his folk-influenced songwriting style.[1] As a multi-instrumentalist and self-taught producer, he has released five albums in total and directed music videos for his own tracks, blending his interests in music and filmmaking from a young age.[4] Transitioning to acting, Jarvis made his professional debut in 2012 with the short film The Naughty Room, which he also wrote and directed.[1] He rose to prominence with supporting roles in films like Lady Macbeth (2016) as the groomsman and Calm with Horses (2019) as the volatile enforcer Arm, earning praise for his intense, physical performances.[3][1] On television, he appeared as Barney Thomason in Peaky Blinders (2019–2022) and as Campion Sturges in Raised by Wolves (2020), before achieving widespread acclaim for portraying English pilot John Blackthorne in the FX series Shōgun (2024).[3][2][5] Jarvis has continued to expand his career with roles in Netflix's Persuasion (2022), Alto Knights (2025) as Vincent Gigante alongside Robert De Niro, and the lead in the upcoming biopic Young Stalin, where he will portray the future Soviet leader in his early years as a gangster.[3][2][6] He is married with one child, lives in east London, maintains a low online presence without social media accounts, and has been open about managing type 1 diabetes, a condition diagnosed in his youth that influences his approach to demanding roles.[1][7][8]Early life and education
Family background and birth
Harrison Cosmo Krikoryan Jarvis, known professionally as Cosmo Jarvis, was born on September 1, 1989, in Ridgewood, New Jersey, United States.[9][10] The middle name "Krikoryan" reflects his Armenian ancestry, derived from his mother's family.[11] Jarvis's mother is Armenian-American, with her parents being Armenian immigrants who settled in the United States, while his father is English.[12][13] This multicultural background resulted in dual British-American citizenship for Jarvis.[8] His Armenian heritage from his mother's side has been acknowledged in interviews, where he has discussed his grandparents' immigrant roots without emphasizing a shared ethnic identity.[12] He has one younger sibling, his brother Fletcher Jarvis, a multi-instrumentalist involved in film and music production.[9][13]Childhood and upbringing in England
Jarvis was born in Ridgewood, New Jersey, in 1989 to an Armenian-American mother and an English father, but his family relocated to England shortly after his birth when he was less than a year old, as his father pursued maritime law studies in Plymouth, Devon.[14] The family initially settled in the rural Membland hamlet near Plymouth, living in a converted ex-tennis court amid a wooded landscape that Jarvis later described as providing a sense of isolation but also natural immersion: "It was good to grow up there because it was all just trees."[14] Following his parents' separation when he was nine, Jarvis later moved with his mother and younger brother Fletcher to Totnes around his early teens, a small market town in Devon known for its bohemian and artistic community.[4][14] He spent much of his formative years there, first in council flats and later in temporary housing, adapting to the town's laid-back, semi-rural vibe after the initial shock of its relative urbanity compared to Membland.[14] Totnes offered a stable, if modest, environment where the family remained rooted, with his mother continuing her work as an artist and teacher in the area.[15] Jarvis's early exposure to music and the arts was shaped by his family's diverse influences during this period in Devon. His mother, an Armenian-American artist, fostered a creative household, while his father's background in the merchant navy introduced him to eclectic sounds like Grateful Dead albums, Rolling Stones records, and film soundtracks.[14] These elements, combined with his parents' shared appreciation for varied musical tastes, encouraged Jarvis's initial forays into piano lessons at school and later guitar playing, laying the groundwork for his artistic development in the rural Devon setting.[14]Education and early creative interests
Jarvis attended Ivybridge Community College in Devon for his secondary education, where he first engaged with music through school activities, including playing the piano.[14] He later briefly enrolled in sixth form at a school in Totnes but was asked to leave after three months due to an incident and a lack of engagement with formal lectures, ultimately departing at age 16 to pursue creative endeavors independently.[16][14] With no formal training in music or the arts, Jarvis relied on self-directed learning during his time in rural Devon.[14] From a young age, Jarvis displayed a passion for storytelling, experimenting with various creative mediums in his Totnes upbringing.[17] In secondary school, he learned to play the electric guitar from a friend, marking the beginning of his self-taught musical skills, which he further developed using a computer and free software for multitrack recording during his adolescence.[14] Influenced by artists such as The Beatles, Talking Heads, and blues musicians like John Lee Hooker, he began writing songs and creating short films, including stop-motion animations and scary stories captured on a camcorder with friends.[16][17] These early experiments reflected his innovative approach to music and filmmaking, often drawing from local experiences in isolation.[14]Career
Music career beginnings (2006–2014)
Jarvis entered the professional music scene in 2006 with his self-released debut album 19 Songs By Cosmo Jarvis, a collection of early self-taught songwriting efforts. He continued leveraging his self-taught skills in songwriting and production that he had honed from a young age through experimentation with instruments and software.[4] His second album, Humasyouhitch/Sonofabitch, was released on November 16, 2009, as a self-produced double album comprising 27 tracks divided into two distinct parts: the first a collection of personal love songs, and the second a conceptual narrative inspired by his parents' separation.[18][19][20] During this period, Jarvis developed a distinctive musical style that blended folk, indie rock, and experimental elements, often incorporating acoustic ballads, punk-folk influences, middle-of-the-road rock structures, and occasional rap verses within individual songs; this eclecticism stemmed from his broad exposure to diverse genres via online file-sharing platforms like LimeWire.[4][21] In 2010, Jarvis released his early single "Gay Pirates" as a vinyl 7-inch, a satirical track that gained viral attention through its self-directed music video and endorsements from figures like Stephen Fry, marking his initial foray into broader recognition.[22][23] This period also saw the beginnings of his live performances across the UK, including intimate gigs in venues like London's The Islington and Manchester's Night & Day Cafe, where he performed with a band and delivered emotive, narrative-driven sets that highlighted his witty stage presence.[24][4] Jarvis's third album, Is the World Strange or Am I Strange?, followed on September 26, 2011, again self-released through his own label, 25th Frame Productions, featuring 18 tracks that expanded on his thematic explorations of social alienation and personal introspection with a raw, unpolished indie rock sound.[25][26][4]Transition to film and acting (2010–2014)
In the early 2010s, Cosmo Jarvis began expanding his creative pursuits beyond music, teaching himself filmmaking techniques through self-produced short films in his hometown of Totnes, Devon, where he experimented with stop-motion animation and comic vignettes featuring local amateur actors.[14] These early efforts, such as the YouTube shorts Draw and Bait, Locate and Confiscate, showcased his guerrilla-style approach to visual storytelling, drawing from suburban youth experiences and gaining modest online traction.[14] Jarvis's formal entry into film came in 2012 with The Naughty Room, a black comedy he wrote, directed, and starred in as the protagonist Todd, a 20-year-old confined to his family's bathroom by his mother amid themes of abuse, drugs, and redemption.[27] Shot on a micro-budget of approximately £10,000 at his grandmother's house, the 73-minute feature marked his debut as a multifaceted filmmaker, evolving from an initial short film concept that he expanded after deeming it insufficient.[14][15] The project highlighted his self-taught directing skills, honed without formal training, and served as a bold, DIY statement of his ambitions in visual media.[3] This period also saw Jarvis balancing his music releases with burgeoning film interests; in July 2012, he issued his fourth album Think Bigger through 25th Frame Productions, a collection of 11 tracks exploring themes of insecurity, love, and rebellion that mirrored his push toward broader creative expression.[28] The album's promotion coincided with the completion of The Naughty Room, underscoring his dual focus on audio and visual arts as interconnected outlets for personal narrative.[15] In 2013, he released They Don't Build Hearts Like They Used To, a four-track EP continuing his introspective folk style.[29] By 2014, Jarvis took initial steps into professional acting, auditioning successfully for the role of Dani Tasuev, a terrorist operative, in the spy thriller Spooks: The Greater Good, with filming wrapping that year ahead of its 2015 release.[30] This minor supporting part represented his first credited on-screen performance in a major production, signaling a gradual shift from self-directed projects to collaborative industry work while he relocated to London to access greater film opportunities.[3]Acting breakthrough and key roles (2015–2023)
Jarvis achieved his acting breakthrough with the role of Sebastian in the 2016 period drama Lady Macbeth, directed by William Oldroyd, where he portrayed a stable hand who engages in a passionate and volatile affair with the protagonist, Katherine, played by Florence Pugh.[31] The film, set in rural 19th-century England, highlighted Jarvis's ability to convey intense emotional and physical intensity, earning praise for his magnetic presence alongside Pugh's emerging talent.[32] This role marked a significant step from his earlier music-adjacent film experiments, establishing him as a compelling screen presence in independent British cinema. Building on this momentum, Jarvis delivered a standout performance as Douglas "Arm" Armstrong in the 2019 Irish crime thriller Calm with Horses, directed by Nick Rowland, where he played a former boxer turned enforcer for a rural drug clan, grappling with loyalty, violence, and fatherhood to his autistic son.[33] His portrayal, noted for its haunting physical eloquence and vulnerability beneath brute force, earned him a Best Actor nomination at the 2020 British Independent Film Awards (BIFA).[34] The film received 10 BIFA nominations overall, underscoring its impact and Jarvis's rising profile in ensemble-driven dramas. From 2019 to 2022, Jarvis expanded into television with the recurring role of Barney Thomason in Peaky Blinders, appearing across seasons five and six as a shell-shocked World War I veteran and loyal ally to Tommy Shelby, whose tragic arc added depth to the Birmingham gang saga.[35] He then took on the lead romantic role of Captain Frederick Wentworth in the 2022 Netflix adaptation of Jane Austen's Persuasion, directed by Carrie Cracknell, opposite Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot, in a modernized take on the classic tale of second chances and regret.[36] Jarvis's Wentworth was depicted as a rugged, emotionally guarded naval officer, contributing to the film's exploration of class and lost love within a high-profile ensemble cast. In 2023, Jarvis starred as Hamish in the Irish thriller It Is In Us All, written and directed by Antonia Campbell-Hughes, portraying a grieving Londoner who travels to rural Donegal after a family loss and becomes entangled in a volatile relationship with a local teenager following a car accident.[37] His layered performance, blending fragility, rage, and introspection, was lauded for its emotional depth and earned a BIFA nomination, further solidifying his reputation for intense, character-driven roles in intimate ensemble narratives.2024–2025: Shōgun, major films
In 2024, Cosmo Jarvis achieved international recognition for his portrayal of English pilot John Blackthorne in the FX historical drama series Shōgun, adapted from James Clavell's novel and set in feudal Japan. His performance as the resourceful and culturally displaced protagonist drew praise for its intensity and nuance, contributing to the show's critical acclaim and multiple award nominations.[38] Although Jarvis himself did not receive an Emmy nomination, his work generated significant buzz ahead of the 2024 ceremony, with outlets highlighting his commanding presence alongside co-stars Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai.[38] The series, which premiered in February 2024, became FX's most-watched debut, and Jarvis is set to reprise the role with production set to begin in January 2026.[39] Jarvis's rising profile led to several high-profile film roles throughout 2024 and 2025. In the Australian prison drama Inside (2024), directed by Charles Williams, he played Mark Shepard, a veteran inmate mentoring a young transfer amid tense institutional dynamics, earning positive reviews for his grounded depiction of hardened resilience.[40] He followed this with a supporting role in Barry Levinson's mob biopic Alto Knights (2025), starring opposite Robert De Niro as dual gangsters Frank Costello and Vito Genovese, exploring mid-20th-century New York underworld rivalries.[6] In Alex Garland and Ray Mendoza's war thriller Warfare (2025), Jarvis portrayed a soldier in a harrowing recreation of a 2006 Iraq mission, delivering a visceral performance in the ensemble-driven narrative based on Mendoza's real experiences.[41] He joined Guy Ritchie's ensemble for the aristocratic drama Wife & Dog (2025), playing a key family member alongside Benedict Cumberbatch, Rosamund Pike, and Anthony Hopkins, with production wrapping in mid-2025.[42] Additionally, in May 2025, Jarvis was announced to lead the biopic Young Stalin, directed by Géla Babluani, portraying the future Soviet leader's early criminal years based on Simon Sebag Montefiore's book.[2] Jarvis's contributions to Shōgun and Warfare were honored at major awards in 2025. The Shōgun cast, including Jarvis, won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series at the 31st SAG Awards in February, recognizing the series' collective impact.[43] Later that year, at the 2025 British Independent Film Awards, the Warfare ensemble—featuring Jarvis alongside D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Will Poulter, Kit Connor, and others—received the Best Ensemble Performance award, announced in November as part of the ceremony's craft honors.[44]Personal life
Marriage and family
Jarvis married his longtime partner in early 2024, as evidenced by him wearing a wedding ring during a February interview and references to his wife in subsequent discussions.[3][45] The couple welcomed their first child shortly after, with Jarvis describing fatherhood as a grounding influence that simplifies his professional responsibilities.[46] Details about the child and family life remain private, aligning with Jarvis's preference for maintaining a low public profile on personal matters.[8] In early 2024 interviews, Jarvis expressed intentions to start a family, noting it as a key personal objective amid his rising career.[3] He has since shared brief insights into enjoying simple family routines, such as spending time together and pursuing shared interests like gardening.[46]Health challenges and lifestyle choices
Cosmo Jarvis lives with type 1 diabetes, a chronic autoimmune condition that requires ongoing management through insulin therapy, blood glucose monitoring, and lifestyle adjustments. He first publicly discussed his diagnosis in a 2020 interview, emphasizing the disease's demands and his reliance on medical technology for daily survival.[1] Jarvis has been candid about the emotional toll of the condition, including episodes of anxiety and depression, which he links to the constant vigilance needed to prevent complications. He has reflected on its impact on his mortality awareness, noting in the same interview that "type one diabetes catches up with you" and expressing reluctance to celebrate milestones due to fears of a shortened lifespan, such as stating he might not live another decade. Despite these challenges, he credits technological advancements, like continuous glucose monitors and insulin pumps, as essential lifelines, remarking, "I fully accept that if it wasn’t for technology, diabetics and anybody with any ailment would be the first people to be dead."[1][47] In addition to health management, Jarvis prioritizes a low-key personal life to maintain equilibrium amid his career. He avoids social media entirely, viewing it as unnecessary exposure, and only adopted a smartphone in recent years under professional pressure from his agent. This deliberate detachment from digital noise underscores his preference for privacy and introspection, allowing him to nurture interests like gardening and observing nature, which provide a counterbalance to the intensity of acting roles. Described as a "private soul who shuns the spotlight," Jarvis focuses on authentic connections and simple routines, such as running lines in parks or using a typewriter for writing, to sustain mental well-being and work-life harmony.[1][48][45]Filmography
Film roles
Cosmo Jarvis began his film career with multifaceted contributions, including writing and directing his debut project, before transitioning to acting in supporting and leading roles across various genres such as drama, thriller, and period pieces.[49]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | The Naughty Room | Todd Kennedy | Jarvis also wrote, directed, produced, composed the music, and edited this black comedy drama about abuse, drugs, and adolescent struggles.[50] |
| 2015 | Spooks: The Greater Good | Dani Tasuev | Supporting role in action thriller about MI5 agents tracking a terrorist.[51] |
| 2016 | Monochrome | Gabriel Lenard | He portrayed a detective using his neurological condition to track a serial killer targeting wealthy landowners in this psychological thriller.[52] |
| 2016 | Lady Macbeth | Sebastian | Jarvis played the son of a coal mine owner in this period drama exploring a young woman's rebellion against societal constraints in 19th-century England.[53] |
| 2017 | The Marker | Steve | In this crime thriller, he appeared as a supporting character in a story of redemption and guilt haunting a criminal. |
| 2018 | Farming | Jonesy | He depicted a farm laborer in this biographical drama based on director Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje's experiences as a Nigerian boy fostered by a white family in 1960s England. |
| 2018 | Hunter Killer | Fathometer Operator | Jarvis had a minor role in this action thriller involving a U.S. Navy captain's mission to rescue the Russian president. |
| 2019 | Nocturnal | Pete | He starred as an older man forming a secretive bond with a teenage girl in this atmospheric drama set in a seaside town.[54] |
| 2019 | Calm with Horses (The Shadow of Violence) | Arm (Douglas "Arm" Armstrong) | Jarvis portrayed a former boxer turned enforcer for a drug-dealing family, grappling with family loyalties in rural Ireland. |
| 2020 | Funny Face | Saul | In this comedy-drama about identity and deception, he played a key supporting role alongside Alaïa Odom. |
| 2020 | The Evening Hour | Terry Rose | He portrayed a young caregiver navigating moral dilemmas in a declining Appalachian coal town. |
| 2022 | It Is in Us All | Hamish Considine | Jarvis starred as a man confronting trauma after a car accident in this Irish drama exploring human connection. |
| 2022 | Persuasion | Captain Frederick Wentworth | He embodied the naval officer in this Netflix adaptation of Jane Austen's novel about second chances in love. |
| 2024 | Inside | Mark Shepard | In this Australian prison drama, Jarvis played a convict enduring psychological strain in solitary confinement.[55] |
| 2025 | Warfare | Elliott | He depicted a soldier in this Iraq War drama based on real events from ex-Navy SEAL Ray Mendoza's experiences. |
| 2025 | The Alto Knights | Vincent Gigante | Jarvis portrayed the notorious mobster "The Chin" in this crime film, collaborating with Robert De Niro, who played dual roles as rival bosses Vito Genovese and Frank Costello.[56][6] |
| 2025 | Young Stalin | Joseph Stalin | Lead role in biopic about Stalin's early life as a gangster, directed by Géla Babluani.[2] |
Television roles
Jarvis's early television work consisted primarily of guest appearances in British anthology and drama series. In 2016, he debuted on screen as the troubled teenager Verno in the single episode "Taxi for Linda" of the BBC's Moving On anthology series, directed by Noreen Kershaw.[57] That same year, he portrayed Lieutenant Curtis Steiger, a U.S. Army officer involved in a wartime romance, across two episodes ("The Price" and "God Rest You Merry") of the BBC miniseries My Mother and Other Strangers. He also appeared as the synth-obsessed character Martin in the third episode of season two of Channel 4's sci-fi series Humans. In 2017, Jarvis guest-starred as the suspect Woody in the season seven episode "The Blanket Mire" of ITV's crime drama Vera, starring Brenda Blethyn.[58] Jarvis gained a recurring role in 2019 as Barney Thomason, a World War I veteran sniper and longtime friend of Tommy Shelby, appearing in three episodes of season five of BBC's Peaky Blinders.[59] In 2020, he played Campion Sturges, a former Mithraic scientist and atheist advocate who created the android Mother, in three episodes of HBO Max's sci-fi series Raised by Wolves, created by Aaron Guzikowski.[5] His most prominent television role to date is as the lead character John Blackthorne, an English pilot and navigator shipwrecked in feudal Japan in 1600, in the FX historical drama Shōgun (2024–present), based on James Clavell's novel; he appears in all ten episodes of the first season, directed by Jonathan van Tulleken and others.[60]Awards and nominations
Film awards and nominations
Jarvis's performance as Arm in the 2019 film Calm with Horses earned him a nomination for Best Actor at the 2020 British Independent Film Awards (BIFA).[61][62] In 2022, he received a BIFA nomination for Best Lead Performance for his role in the indie drama It Is In Us All.[63] For the 2025 war film Warfare, Jarvis and his co-stars won the BIFA for Best Ensemble Performance.[44][64]Television awards and nominations
Jarvis earned recognition for his leading role as John Blackthorne in the FX series Shōgun (2024), which dominated television awards in 2024 and 2025. At the 4th Astra TV Awards, held by the Hollywood Creative Alliance, Jarvis received a nomination for Best Actor in a Streaming Drama Series, while Shōgun won awards for Best Streaming Drama Series, Best Actor in a Streaming Drama Series (Hiroyuki Sanada), and Best Actress in a Streaming Drama Series (Anna Sawai).[65] The following year, the Shōgun cast, including Jarvis, won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series at the 31st SAG Awards, marking a highlight of the series' awards sweep.[66] Despite widespread acclaim for his performance, Jarvis was not nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award, though he was viewed as a strong contender in the Lead Actor in a Drama Series category; Shōgun nonetheless secured a record 18 Emmy wins, including Outstanding Drama Series.[38]Discography
Studio albums
Cosmo Jarvis's studio albums showcase his evolution as a singer-songwriter, blending indie rock, folk, and pop elements with introspective and satirical lyrics. His discography began with self-released efforts before gaining distribution through indie labels, reflecting his DIY ethos and multi-instrumental talents. Over the years, he produced four full-length studio albums, each marked by raw production and personal storytelling, though his focus shifted toward acting by the mid-2010s.| Album Title | Release Date | Label | Format | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 Songs By Cosmo Jarvis | 2006 | Self-released | CD, digital download | Debut album, featuring 19 tracks recorded independently at age 17; established his early folk-pop style.[67][68] |
| Humasyouhitch/Sonofabitch | November 16, 2009 | Wall of Sound | 2xCD, digital | Double album with 20 tracks spanning rock and indie influences; his first major-label release, praised for its eclectic energy and humor.[69][70] |
| Is the World Strange or Am I Strange? | September 26, 2011 | 25th Frame Productions | CD, digital | 19-track sophomore effort exploring themes of alienation; includes the viral single "Gay Pirates" and received positive reviews for its witty songwriting.[71][72] |
| Think Bigger | July 23, 2012 (original); November 20, 2020 (deluxe edition) | 25th Frame Productions / 7Hz Recordings | Digital, streaming | 11-track third album emphasizing singer-songwriter introspection; the 2020 deluxe reissue adds 9 bonus tracks, remastered for broader accessibility.[73][74] |
Singles and other releases
Cosmo Jarvis has released several singles and EPs throughout his career, often showcasing his eclectic style blending folk, indie rock, and humorous storytelling outside of his full-length albums.[75] One of his earliest notable non-album releases is the double A-side single "Humasyouhitch / Sonofabitch," issued in 2009, which highlighted his raw, self-produced sound and gained attention for its quirky, narrative-driven tracks.[70] In 2011, Jarvis released "Gay Pirates," initially as a standalone single that became a viral hit after endorsement by Stephen Fry on Twitter; the track, featuring a music video depicting a dramatic pirate romance, was later expanded into a three-track EP exploring themes of unrequited love with a satirical twist.[76][22] That same year, he issued the EP Sure As Hell Not Jesus, a four-track collection delving into introspective and irreverent lyrics, produced independently and distributed via limited CD runs.[77] The 2013 EP They Don't Build Hearts Like They Used To marked a shift toward more polished production, with tracks like the title song addressing heartbreak in a folk-pop vein; it was released as a numbered, signed limited edition CD. Also in 2013, the satirical single "Collaborating with Rihanna" emerged as a standalone release, poking fun at celebrity culture and music industry aspirations through Jarvis's signature wit.[75] Jarvis's 2017 single "Liberty" represented a brief return to solo music output, featuring upbeat indie elements and themes of personal freedom, amid his growing focus on acting. In 2020, coinciding with the deluxe reissue of his album Think Bigger, Jarvis released several archival or bonus singles including "Friend of the Devil," "Lacie," and "Tell Me Who to Be," which were not part of original album tracklists but added new acoustic interpretations.[78] No new singles, EPs, or archival releases from Jarvis have been documented as of 2025, following his emphasis on film and television projects.[21]| Title | Year | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Humasyouhitch / Sonofabitch | 2009 | Single | Double A-side; early independent release.[70] |
| Gay Pirates | 2011 | Single/EP | Viral hit; 3 tracks including single version.[22] |
| Sure As Hell Not Jesus | 2011 | EP | 4 tracks; limited CD edition.[77] |
| They Don't Build Hearts Like They Used To | 2013 | EP | Signed limited edition; heartbreak themes. |
| Collaborating with Rihanna | 2013 | Single | Satirical commentary on fame.[75] |
| Liberty | 2017 | Single | Indie-pop track on freedom. |
| Friend of the Devil / Lacie / Tell Me Who to Be | 2020 | Singles | Archival bonuses tied to album reissue.[78] |