JP Saxe — Pics
Born in Toronto, based in Los Angeles, and here to take over the music world, JP Saxe debuted on the scene with his 2017 single, “Changed.” It earned over 3 million streams on Spotify, and earned him the title of Ones To Watch that year. Prior to breaking out on the scene, JP Saxe grew up surrounded by music. He’s the grandson of award-winning Hungarian-born cellist Janos Starker. Inspired by his grandfather, JP studied cello as a teen, but switched to the piano and guitar after discovering jazz and R&B. By his twenties, he was performing weekly in Toronto and sharing his songs online. He caught the eyes of music producers in Los Angeles, and was invited to hone his craft working with some of the best. For four years, he worked as a songwriter with Kevin “Babyface” Edmons, Foxes, and Jacob Banks. Now, he’s ready to step out from the engineer’s booth and in front of the mic.
JP Saxe Performs At Webster hall
JP Saxe enchanted the audiences of New York City in October 2019. He performed at Webster Hall for a packed crowd.
JP Saxe Sings His Heart Out
JP Saxe broke out on the scene in 2017 with his song, “Changed.” The track, he said, was inspired by an “abnormally cold for Los Angeles. For whatever reason, the feeling of my hands being freezing in L.A. made me remember someone I hadn’t thought about in a long time, which set me into this whole process of recognizing how much I’ve grown away from that part of my life.”
JP Saxe Lights Up Webster Hall
In October 2019, JP Saxe released his song with Julia Michaels, “If The World Was Ending.” The video featured him and Julia overcoming the gap in their fractured relationship to spend their last few moments on Earth together.
JP Saxe Rocks
“Julia and I wrote this song the day we met,” JP tells HollywoodLife about “If The World Was Ending.” “It was a couple of weeks after the last earthquake in LA. We were talking about the reasons people have to not to talk to the people they really want to talk to…but know they shouldn’t talk to…and how many of those reasons would hold up in the apocalypse.”