Welcome to the ballad era.
“I LOVE U-SERS (FEAT. ANTHONY GARGIULA)”
OUT NOW
“I Love U-sers” Cover Kit!
CLICK THE IMAGE TO SING/PLAY “I LOVE U-SERS!”
“Broken Phone” Cover Kit!
CLICK THE IMAGE TO SING/PLAY “BROKEN PHONE!”
“If You Ever Left Me” Cover Kit!
HI ICONS! I’m Jules Brave and I’m a pop singer/songwriter from NYC who you could probably spot anywhere wearing bright-blue Beats headphones and drinking a Mocha Cookie Crumble Frappuccino LOL. I never thought I’d be writing a bio like this because I didn’t think I’d be the artist. I’ve been songwriting since I was 8 years old, but I always thought I’d write for popstars someday because I didn’t think I could fit into the old, antiquated stereotype of what an artist used to be (ya know… skinny, sexy, wearing fancy clothes vibes, etc;...). I love to write vulnerable, tear-jerking piano ballads about the most severe symptoms of heartbreak, but also enthusiastic, upbeat pop earworms about being a fucking bad-ass HAHA. I’m heavily influenced by songwriting icons John Mayer and Sara Bareilles, but also pop/r&b queen legends Beyoncé, Whitney Houston and Ariana Grande.
In the beginning of 2020, I was cold-emailing my songs to entertainment lawyers, artist A&Rs, publishing companies… just anyone who would take a chance on me and hopefully get my songs placed with artists I’ve always looked up to. I was lucky enough to get to play my songs for music industry veterans and was so grateful to receive positive responses from writers like J Kash, Jason Evigan and Meghan Trainor. In the meantime, I was taking vocal lessons with singer and vocal coach icon, Natalie Weiss, so that my demo vocals would sound as convincing as possible. She started posting funny videos on her social media of us working on my original songs, with me yelling the f-bomb anytime I would crack or mess up (lol). Her audience was so supportive of me; they embraced my imperfections as a singer and sometimes extra human-being LMFAO, but continually asked where they could stream the music they only heard a few seconds of. They were encouraging the parts of me I thought I needed to hide from the world; all of the reasons I thought I shouldn’t be an artist are the reasons people were telling me I should be one.
After a long period of self-reflection, I realized that my priority and goal is to create an authentic, positive, and inclusive community through my music. Ever since the quarantine, I’ve been going on Instagram Live regularly to share my creative process under my galaxy light, sing karaoke to musical theatre songs, and engage in meaningful conversations with listeners-turned-friends. I am obsessed with meme and TikTok culture, and have genuinely enjoyed posting self-deprecating, light-hearted, humorous videos as music promotion, which has also garnered deep connections with my supporters HAHA. I’m eager and grateful to continue my artist journey by releasing many more bops and ballads in 2022, as well as live out my original dream of writing for and with other artists. You’re an icon!
HI ICONS! I’m Jules Brave and I’m a pop singer/songwriter from NYC who you could probably spot anywhere wearing bright-blue Beats headphones and drinking a Mocha Cookie Crumble Frappuccino LOL. I never thought I’d be writing a bio like this because I didn’t think I’d be the artist. I’ve been songwriting since I was 8 years old, but I always thought I’d write for popstars someday because I didn’t think I could fit into the old, antiquated stereotype of what an artist used to be (ya know… skinny, sexy, wearing fancy clothes vibes, etc;...). I love to write vulnerable, tear-jerking piano ballads about the most severe symptoms of heartbreak, but also enthusiastic, upbeat pop earworms about being a fucking bad-ass HAHA. I’m heavily influenced by songwriting icons John Mayer and Sara Bareilles, but also pop/r&b queen legends Beyoncé, Whitney Houston and Ariana Grande.
In the beginning of 2020, I was cold-emailing my songs to entertainment lawyers, artist A&Rs, publishing companies… just anyone who would take a chance on me and hopefully get my songs placed with artists I’ve always looked up to. I was lucky enough to get to play my songs for music industry veterans and was so grateful to receive positive responses from writers like J Kash, Jason Evigan and Meghan Trainor. In the meantime, I was taking vocal lessons with singer and vocal coach icon, Natalie Weiss, so that my demo vocals would sound as convincing as possible. She started posting funny videos on her social media of us working on my original songs, with me yelling the f-bomb anytime I would crack or mess up (lol). Her audience was so supportive of me; they embraced my imperfections as a singer and sometimes extra human-being LMFAO, but continually asked where they could stream the music they only heard a few seconds of. They were encouraging the parts of me I thought I needed to hide from the world; all of the reasons I thought I shouldn’t be an artist are the reasons people were telling me I should be one.
After a long period of self-reflection, I realized that my priority and goal is to create an authentic, positive, and inclusive community through my music. Ever since the quarantine, I’ve been going on Instagram Live regularly to share my creative process under my galaxy light, sing karaoke to musical theatre songs, and engage in meaningful conversations with listeners-turned-friends. I am obsessed with meme and TikTok culture, and have genuinely enjoyed posting self-deprecating, light-hearted, humorous videos as music promotion, which has also garnered deep connections with my supporters HAHA. I’m eager and grateful to continue my artist journey by releasing many more bops and ballads in 2022, as well as live out my original dream of writing for and with other artists. You’re an icon!