Plan B talks about his musical "crossroads"
In an exclusive interview with Newsbeat Plan B says the birth of his daughter has made him question what he wants to do in the music industry.
The baby girl was born a year ago and Plan B, real name Ben Drew, has kept all details about his child and the mother private.
The 30-year-old has now admitted though having a daughter has made him re-think his music career.
"I'm completely in love with her, she's the most important thing in my life.
"More important than music or film or anything."

"It makes the next album very difficult," he says, "because I know how long I'm going to have to be away from her in order to make the next album successful and that scares me a bit."
"So I'm at a crossroads in terms of what I want to talk about and whether or not I even want that in my life anymore."
Incidentally, Plan B's manager then stopped him answering if that meant he had plans to quit music, as our interview time was over.
Plan B was talking to Newsbeat at the launch of the summer festival of somewhereto, an organisation that helps 16-25 year-olds access space to work or create in.
He's an ambassador-mentor for the project as well as having founded his own organisation to help young people, Each One Teach One (EOTO).
Break from music
It's been two years though since Plan B released any new songs and he admits he's "trying to find his way" musically.
His last release was Ill Manors; the soundtrack to the film of the same title, inspired in part by the London riots of 2011.
Plan B says he has no plans to take on any film roles at the moment and although he has "experimented" in the studio from January to May 2014, even his music plans remain sketchy;
"I just feel with me the story always comes first and I'm just trying to figure out what story I want to tell to the world next and I'm not sure I've figured that out yet."
"When I do the next album it will come, you know, but I'm at a kind of crossroads at the minute."
Plan B also hasn't changed his mind about becoming a politician as he fears he would be "used and exploited" if he did.
Plan B: I don't want to be a poster boy
He maintains the political system in the UK is "flawed" and feels that "the real people who are trying to affect change, are the people that organisations like somewhereto and Each One Teach One work with."
"Those are the real people," he adds, "and they don't get the same promotion as the politicians, so this is about money going to the people that know what to do with it."
"And I don't need to be a politician to do that, I can just be me and use my connections and my influence to try and get the money and put it in the right place."
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