Jacob Collier (born 2 August 1994) is a British singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, arranger, composer, producer, and educator renowned for his innovative harmonic arrangements, genre-blending compositions, and ability to engage audiences in live performances through audience-led choirs.[1][2] Hailing from a musical family in North London, he has achieved unprecedented success in contemporary music, earning seven Grammy Awards and 16 nominations as of 2025, including distinctions for each of his first five albums, making him the first British artist to accomplish this feat.[2][3]Born into a lineage of accomplished musicians—his mother, Suzie Collier, is a violinist and conductor, his grandfather Derek Collier was a violinist, and his sisters Sophie and Ella are also performers—Collier was immersed in music from an early age.[1] He attended Mill Hill County High School, followed by the Purcell School for Young Musicians, and later studied jazz piano at the Royal Academy of Music, graduating in 2018.[1][4] His education emphasized classical and jazz traditions, which he credits for shaping his experimental approach to harmony and orchestration.[1]Collier's career gained momentum in 2013 when, at age 19, he began uploading self-produced YouTube videos featuring intricate vocal harmonies and covers of artists like Stevie Wonder and Radiohead, amassing millions of views and catching the attention of legendary producer Quincy Jones, who signed him to his management label.[1][5] This led to his debut album, In My Room (2016), which he recorded, arranged, performed, and produced entirely in his family home, showcasing his multi-instrumental prowess across piano, bass, drums, guitar, and more.[6] His breakthrough series, Djesse (2018–2024), comprises four volumes that explore jazz, pop, R&B, and orchestral elements, featuring collaborations with artists such as Mahalia, Ty Dolla $ign, and the Metropole Orkest.[6][2]Collier's music is characterized by its joyful complexity, drawing on music theory concepts like microtonality and polyrhythms, delivered through a vocal range spanning over four octaves (from A1 to B5), and often performed with harmonic layers created by looping his own voice.[1] He has collaborated with global stars including Coldplay, Stormzy, Alicia Keys, and Shawn Mendes, while his live shows transform audiences into participatory choirs, fostering communal musical experiences.[1] In 2025, Collier released his fifth studio album, The Light For Days, a stripped-back project recorded in just four days using a single guitar, emphasizing introspection and iteration in his creative process.[7][8] Hailed as a "colorful Mozart of Gen Z" by The New York Times, his work continues to bridge genres and inspire a new generation of musicians.[9]
Early life and education
Jacob Collier was born on 2 August 1994 in North London to a family with deep roots in classical music.[1] His mother, Suzie Collier, is a violinist, conductor, and professor of violin at the Royal Academy of Music (RAM).[1] His maternal grandfather, Derek Collier, was a prominent violinist who served as professor of violin at the RAM and leader of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Collier has two younger sisters, Sophie and Ella, both of whom are also musicians and performers; the family frequently engaged in group activities such as singing Bach chorales together.[1] Immersed in music from a young age, Collier began improvising on the piano as a child rather than following traditional practice routines, developing a self-taught foundation in harmony and composition.[10]Collier attended Mill Hill County High School from approximately 2004 to 2010, where he participated in choral performances ranging from Mozart to Benjamin Britten.[11] He then transferred to the Purcell School for Young Musicians, a specialist music school, which he left at age 18 around 2012.[1] Subsequently, he enrolled at the Royal Academy of Music to study jazz piano, graduating in 2018.[4] His formal education blended classical and jazz traditions, which he has credited with informing his innovative approaches to harmony, orchestration, and performance.[1]
Career
2011–2015: Viral videos and early recognition
In late 2011, at the age of 17, Jacob Collier began uploading homemade split-screen videos to YouTube from his bedroom in North London, featuring multi-layered performances where he played multiple instruments and sang numerous vocal parts simultaneously.[12] His initial uploads included originals like "Serendipity," an electro-acoustic composition, and inventive covers such as "The Arrow and the Song" and "I've Told Every Little Star," showcasing his early experimentation with harmony, improvisation, and self-production using basic equipment like a single microphone and laptop.[13] These videos quickly attracted attention for their technical complexity and joyful energy, amassing over a million views collectively by 2013.[13]Collier's breakthrough came in October 2013 with his reimagined cover of Stevie Wonder's "Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing," a six-minute a cappella arrangement transformed into a Latin jazz suite with intricate vocal harmonies, bass lines, and percussive elements performed entirely by Collier.[14] The video went viral shortly after upload, garnering 200,000 views within its first week and millions more over time, drawing praise from musicians including Pat Metheny, Steve Vai, and k.d. lang for its innovative harmonic depth and multi-instrumental prowess.[14][13] This success marked a turning point, elevating his channel's subscriber count into the hundreds of thousands and establishing him as a YouTube sensation known for blending jazz, pop, and classical influences in accessible yet sophisticated formats.[12]The viral exposure led to early professional recognition in 2014 when producer Quincy Jones, impressed by the "Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing" video, contacted Collier via email and invited him to perform at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland.[14] There, Jones personally introduced Collier on stage alongside Herbie Hancock, hailing him as a once-in-a-generation talent and securing a mentorship deal with Quincy Jones Productions.[15] By 2015, Collier had expanded his live presence, collaborating with Jones at venues like Ronnie Scott's in London, where he demonstrated real-time vocal harmonization and multi-instrumental improvisation, further solidifying his reputation among jazz circles while continuing to build his online following through additional covers like "Pure Imagination" and "Isn't She Lovely."[13][15]
2016–2018: In My Room, tours, and collaborations
In July 2016, Jacob Collier released his debut album In My Room through the independent label Membran Entertainment Group.[16] The album, comprising 11 tracks of original compositions and covers such as the Beach Boys' "In My Room" and Cilla Black's "Hideaway," was entirely written, arranged, performed, produced, and recorded by Collier in his family's north London music room using software like Cubase and Logic, along with a MIDI keyboard and SM58 microphone.[17] He multi-tracked up to 59 vocal layers on some tracks, such as "You and I," which originated from improvised singing and expanded into approximately 3,000 audio files.[17] The production emphasized spontaneity, with Collier following his ear in real-time arrangements, blending influences from Bach to Bobby McFerrin and Stevie Wonder.[17]Critics praised In My Room for its exuberant innovation and technical virtuosity, marking Collier's transition from YouTube videos to a fully realized recording. NPR described it as a "surprising" work stuffed with "infectious exuberance," highlighting its playful ad-libs, consonant harmonies with dissonant surprises, and a distinct sound evoking Steve Reich and Frank Zappa while appealing to diverse audiences from jazz enthusiasts to glee-club fans.[18] Jazzwise noted its "wild mix of multiply layered vocals and jazz influence," underscoring the album's maximalist yet graceful approach, where excess served a unified artistic vision.[19] The record's reception solidified Collier's reputation as a prodigious multi-instrumentalist capable of dense, rhythmic complexities without losing emotional depth.[20]Following the album's release, Collier embarked on a solo world tour, performing over 150 shows across 26 countries from mid-2016 through December 2017, often using custom harmonizers and multi-frame setups to recreate his layered sound live.[21] Key appearances included his debut at the Montreux Jazz Festival on July 7, 2016, where he performed tracks like "I Wish" amid technical challenges with his equipment.[22] The tour extended into late 2016 with U.S. dates in cities like San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Nashville, followed by European stops at festivals such as Jazznojazz in Zurich and the EFG London Jazz Festival.[23] In 2017, he continued internationally, including performances at the DC Jazz Fest and masterclasses with orchestras, culminating in a TED Talk on music and improvisation.[24][25]Collier's period also featured notable collaborations that expanded his profile. In February 2016, he guested on Snarky Puppy's album Family Dinner – Volume 2, contributing to "Don't You Know," where the band's accompaniment elevated his arrangement into a dynamic jazz-funk piece.[17] That August, he joined a Quincy Jones tribute at the BBC Proms in London, performing alongside Laura Mvula in a program spanning disco to postbop.[26] In 2017, Collier collaborated with MIT's MITO Orchestra on a multimedia project documented in the film Imagination Off the Charts, blending his compositions with visual art.[27] By 2018, he performed at the BBC Proms with conductor Jules Buckley, the Metropole Orkest, and guests including Sam Amidon and vocal group Take 6, interpreting his works in orchestral settings.[28] These partnerships highlighted Collier's growing role in bridging solo innovation with ensemble improvisation.
2018–2024: Djesse series
In 2018, Collier launched his most ambitious project to date, the four-volume album series ''Djesse'', envisioned as a comprehensive exploration of musical collaboration and harmony across genres, cultures, and instrumentation. Announced on November 2, 2018, the series comprises over 40 original songs divided into thematic volumes, each representing a distinct sonic "space" and drawing on contributions from hundreds of musicians worldwide.[29] The project emphasizes Collier's multi-instrumental prowess, harmonic innovations, and commitment to communal music-making, with recordings spanning his London home studio, international locations, and live audience inputs.[30]The first installment, ''Djesse Vol. 1'', was released on December 7, 2018, via Hajanga Records in partnership with Decca and Geffen Records. Centered on orchestral grandeur, it features sweeping arrangements performed by the Metropole Orkest conducted by Collier's mother, Suzie Collier, alongside vocal ensembles and global influences. Key collaborations include British vocal group Voces8 on the opening track "Home," Moroccan gnawa musician Hamid El Kasri, American a cappella group Take 6, and British singer Laura Mvula, blending jazz, classical, and world music elements.[31][30] The album earned Collier his third Grammy Award in 2020 for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals, for his reimagining of Lionel Richie's "All Night Long (All Night)."[32]''Djesse Vol. 2'', released on July 19, 2019, shifted to an intimate acoustic palette, incorporating folk, R&B, neo-soul, and African traditions recorded primarily in Collier's home studio. It highlights songwriting depth with guests such as British folk artist Sam Amidon, Portuguese singer MARO, Malian artist Oumou Sangaré, Northumbrian piper Kathryn Tickell, and vocalists Lianne La Havas, Becca Stevens, dodie, and JoJo. A standout is Collier's orchestral cover of "Moon River," which secured his fourth Grammy in 2020 for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals.[33][34] The volume underscored the series' evolving structure, bridging Vol. 1's expansiveness with more personal expressions.[35]Released amid the COVID-19 pandemic on August 14, 2020, ''Djesse Vol. 3'' delved into "negative space"—funky, nocturnal, and digitally textured soundscapes—without rigid genre boundaries, recorded in diverse locales like Los Angeles, Tokyo, Casablanca, and Nashville. Collaborators included Canadian singer Daniel Caesar and British rapper Rapsody on the lead single "We Haven't Met," alongside Tori Kelly, Ty Dolla $ign, T-Pain, Jessie Reyez, Mahalia, Kemba, and Coldplay's Chris Martin on a cover of "Trouble Man."[36][37] The album received three Grammy nominations in 2021, including Album of the Year, and won for Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals on "He Won't Hold You."[38]The series culminated with ''Djesse Vol. 4'' on February 29, 2024, a euphoric finale emphasizing the human voice through over 100,000 recorded audience contributions in 23 languages, alongside orchestral and choral elements for large-scale performance. Spanning pop, folk, metal, rap, and samba across 16 tracks, it features high-profile guests like Brandi Carlile on "Little Blue," Shawn Mendes, Kirk Franklin, Anoushka Shankar, South Korean group aespa, Chris Martin, and returning artists such as Tori Kelly, plus a duet with Collier's mother on "Box of Stars Pt. 2."[39][40][41] A deluxe edition followed on October 9, 2024, adding five tracks with Emily King, John Legend, and The Mystery of the Bulgarian Voices.[42]To promote the series, Collier embarked on extensive tours beginning in January 2019 with a world tour supporting Vols. 1 and 2, featuring his one-man multimedia shows and orchestral performances. The Djesse World Tour for Vol. 4 launched in spring 2024 across North America, with 31 dates from April to June, followed by European legs, incorporating live elements like audience recordings integral to the album.[29][43] By 2024, the ''Djesse'' series had amassed multiple Grammy wins and nominations, solidifying Collier's reputation as a boundary-pushing innovator in contemporary music.[44]
2025–present: The Light For Days and ongoing projects
In 2025, Jacob Collier released his fifth studio album, The Light for Days, on October 10 via Hajanga/Interscope/Fontana Records.[45] The album marks a departure from his previous multi-instrumental and orchestral works, focusing instead on a minimalist approach centered around Collier's voice and his custom five-string guitar.[46] Recorded over four days at his family home, it features 11 tracks, including originals and covers such as James Taylor's "You Can Close Your Eyes" and The Beatles' "Norwegian Wood," emphasizing emotional intimacy and raw vulnerability.[8][47] Collier described the project as an exploration of "the quiet core of his artistry," with themes of healing, reflection, and simplicity.[48]Critics praised The Light for Days for its stripped-down folk-pop sound and textural depth, noting its calming, restorative quality despite Collier's signature harmonic complexity.[49] Reviewers highlighted tracks like "I Know (A Little)" and "Heaven (Butterflies)" for their emotional resonance and seamless flow, positioning the album as a "perfect listen for a quiet evening" that underscores Collier's versatility beyond large-scale productions.[50] The record has been lauded for blending accessibility with innovation, earning descriptions as "wonderful, calm, and so very raw" while reinforcing Collier's seven Grammy-winning reputation across genres.[51]To promote the album, Collier embarked on "The Solo Tour" in late 2025, featuring intimate performances highlighting his guitar and vocal prowess.[52] The tour includes U.S. dates such as November 2 at Bass Concert Hall in Austin, Texas; October 21 with Chris Thile and the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra in Ann Arbor, Michigan; and November 6 at McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey, alongside Asian stops like November 21 at Beijing Performing Arts Centre and November 25 at Shanghai Oriental Art Center.[53][54][55]A key element of the tour is the debut of Collier's "Audience Symphony Orchestra" project, an innovative concept inviting selected musician-fans to perform onstage with him.[56] The world premiere occurred on October 27, 2025, at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, where 62 participants created a collaborative symphony, joined unexpectedly by Bobby McFerrin as conductor.[57] This participatory format builds on Collier's history of communal music-making, with plans for expansion in future shows to foster direct audience involvement in live arrangements.[58] As of November 2025, Collier continues masterclasses and orchestral collaborations, including a June session at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, signaling ongoing educational and performance initiatives.[59]
Artistry
Musical style
Jacob Collier's musical style is characterized by its eclectic fusion of genres, drawing from jazz, pop, R&B, neo-soul, funk, world music, folk, orchestral, electronic, gospel, choral, hip-hop, and classical elements, often within a single composition.[60][61] This genre-blending approach is evident in works like the Djesse series, where tracks incorporate folk balladry, glittering pop, doom metal, rap, samba, trap bass, and electro-prog, creating densely layered soundscapes that defy traditional categorization.[62] Collier's music emphasizes emotional storytelling and audience engagement, frequently integrating live singalongs to build communal harmonies.[63]Central to his style is an obsession with harmonic innovation, employing surprising dissonances, chromatic progressions, and microtonal elements such as quarter-tones and invented scales like the "Super-Ultra-Hyper-Mega-Meta-Lydian."[61][64] He often favors the key of D for its "wholesome" resonance while exploring unconventional chord collisions and extensions that blend jazz sophistication with pop accessibility.[60] Vocal arrangements are a hallmark, featuring multi-tracked layers—sometimes hundreds of his own voices creating up to eight-part harmonies—alongside a reported four-octave range that spans from A1 to B5.[63][1]As a multi-instrumentalist and self-producer, Collier incorporates everyday sounds (e.g., shipping dock noises in "Saviour") as percussive or melodic elements, layering them with instruments like guitar, piano, bass, drums, and synthesizers to form intricate, self-contained arrangements.[60][61] His productions, such as the 331-track "Sleeping on My Dreams" from Djesse Vol. 3, reflect a virtuosic, experimental ethos that prioritizes boundless creativity over conventional structures, often described as "creative infinitysyndrome."[64] In his 2025 album The Light For Days, Collier explores a more stripped-back, introspective style centered on guitar accompaniment and folk pop elements, recorded in just four days to capture raw emotional depth.[65][66] This technique fosters a sense of choral euphoria and radical imagination, particularly in collaborative projects involving over 150 artists across his discography.[63][62]
Influences and technique
Collier's musical influences stem from a rich, eclectic upbringing in a family immersed in classical and jazz traditions. His mother, violinist and conductor Suzie Collier, played a pivotal role in nurturing his early curiosity, exposing him to diverse genres including Stravinsky and Björk without imposing formal pressure, which allowed him to develop music as a "second language."[67] From childhood, he absorbed Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, Stevie Wonder's joyful fusion of Motown, jazz, and storytelling, Earth, Wind & Fire's rhythmic energy, and Keith Jarrett's improvisational depth.[68] These were complemented by jazz vocalists like Al Jarreau, Bobby McFerrin, and Take 6, as well as pop icons such as Sting, Michael Jackson, and Queen, shaping his boundary-blurring style that blends harmony, rhythm, and emotion.[69][63]Later influences included mentors who guided his professional growth. Quincy Jones, who discovered Collier via YouTube, emphasized transcending genres and maintaining creative control, while Herbie Hancock highlighted the balance between theoretical "science" and soulful expression in performance.[69][63] Collier has cited these figures for inspiring his exploratory approach, evolving from a self-described "explorer" in his youth to an artist who integrates classical complexity, like Bartók's structures, with contemporary funk and soul elements from artists such as J Dilla and D’Angelo.[68][63]Collier's technique is characterized by innovative harmonic exploration and multi-layered production, often self-taught through experimentation. He employs complex reharmonizations, stretching chords into microtonal variations like "half-flat" or "half-sharp" keys, discovered via digital tools to evoke surprise and color in melodies.[69] His arrangements frequently feature dense vocal harmonies—up to 50-60 overdubs in tracks like "You and I"—layered using loop pedals and custom harmonizers built with MIT collaborator Ben Bloomberg.[68] As a multi-instrumentalist proficient in a wide array of instruments, including piano, bass, drums, ukulele, tabla, melodica, guitar, accordion, mandolin, bouzouki, dulcimer, autoharp, and banjo, he records in immersive setups, treating his childhood room as an acoustic instrument by incorporating found sounds like marbles or surfaces for texture.[68]In live and collaborative contexts, Collier's methods emphasize improvisation and audience integration. He often begins with spontaneous vocal or instrumental improvs, as in his GRAMMY-winning arrangement of "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning," where initial layers are refined through group harmonies to uncover new emotional "colors."[70] For projects like Djesse Vol. 4, he transforms concert audiences into real-time "split-harmony choirs," building on his early YouTube technique of performing 8-part vocal stacks and multi-instrumental parts in split-screen videos.[63] This approach, rooted in jazz theory from his Royal Academy of Music studies, prioritizes rhythmic syncopation and theoretical depth while prioritizing human connection over rigid genre labels.[69][63]
Discography
Studio albums
Jacob Collier's studio albums showcase his innovative approach to harmony, orchestration, and multi-layered production, often blending jazz, pop, soul, and classical elements. His debut album marked his emergence as a prodigious talent, while the subsequent Djesse series represents an ambitious multi-volume project spanning collaborations with global artists and ensembles. Following the completion of Djesse, his latest release shifts toward a more intimate, acoustic sound.In My Room is Collier's debut studio album, self-produced and recorded primarily in his childhood bedroom in North London. Released on July 1, 2016, by Hajanga Records, it features 11 tracks that mix original compositions with covers, including reimaginings of "Flintstones" and "Saviour." The album highlights Collier's early experimentation with harmonic complexity and vocal stacking, earning critical acclaim for its fresh take on contemporary jazz.[71]The Djesse series comprises four interconnected studio albums, conceptualized as a single 50-song opus divided into volumes, each emphasizing different musical textures and ensembles. Djesse, Vol. 1, released on December 7, 2018, by Decca Records, contains 9 tracks and features the Metropole Orkest conducted by Jules Buckley, along with vocal group VOCES8 and singer Laura Mvula; standout tracks like "Ocean Wide" and "All Night Long" explore orchestral jazz fusion.Djesse, Vol. 2, issued on July 19, 2019, also by Decca Records, includes 16 tracks with a focus on folk and world influences, featuring artists such as Sam Amidon, Kamasi Washington, and Daniel Caesar; it incorporates elements like Northumbrian pipes and guzheng, as heard in "Moon River" and "À Noite."[72]Djesse, Vol. 3, released on August 14, 2020, by Decca Records, expands to 12 tracks emphasizing R&B and electronic grooves, with collaborations including Ty Dolla $ign, Jessie Reyez, and T-Pain; tracks like "Count the People" and "He Won't Hold You" demonstrate Collier's rhythmic innovation and emotional depth.[73]Djesse, Vol. 4, the series finale, came out on February 29, 2024, via Decca Records/Interscope, boasting 16 tracks that tie together the project's themes through choral and symphonic arrangements; it features over 30 guest artists, including Laufey, John Mayer, and Brandi Carlile, with "WELLLL" and "Cinnamon Crush" exemplifying its celebratory scope.[74]The Light For Days, Collier's sixth studio album, was released on October 10, 2025, by Decca Records, comprising 11 acoustic-driven tracks that prioritize raw emotion and minimalism after the expansive Djesse. Recorded during a period of personal reflection, it includes covers like "Norwegian Wood" and originals such as "Heaven (Butterflies)," performed primarily on piano and voice to evoke introspection.[75]
Album
Release Date
Label
Number of Tracks
Key Collaborators/Notes
In My Room
July 1, 2016
Hajanga Records
11
Self-produced debut; vocal and harmonic experiments.[71]
Djesse, Vol. 1
December 7, 2018
Decca Records
9
Metropole Orkest, VOCES8; orchestral focus.
Djesse, Vol. 2
July 19, 2019
Decca Records
16
Sam Amidon, Daniel Caesar; folk/world elements.[72]
Djesse, Vol. 3
August 14, 2020
Decca Records
12
Ty Dolla $ign, T-Pain; R&B grooves.[73]
Djesse, Vol. 4
February 29, 2024
Decca/Interscope
16
Laufey, John Mayer; choral symphony culmination.[74]
Collier released his debut live album, Piano Ballads - Live From The Djesse World Tour 2022, on September 29, 2022, through Hajanga Records, Decca, and Interscope.[76] The album captures 11 spontaneous solo piano performances of cover songs, improvised nightly during the North American and European legs of his Djesse world tour, with audiences often participating as a multi-part choir.[77] Collier described the project as a personal challenge: "I set myself the challenge of playing a spontaneous rendition of a different song every night on tour… These 11 are amongst my favourite postcards."[77] Recorded across cities including Los Angeles, Fort Lauderdale, Stockholm, Oslo, London, and Lisbon, the collection emphasizes intimate, unscripted interpretations that highlight Collier's harmonic innovations and emotional depth on piano.[78]The album reimagines classics from artists such as Queen, ABBA, The Beatles, and James Taylor, blending jazz-inflected improvisation with pop balladry. Two tracks feature guest vocalists: "Dancing Queen" with Alita Moses in Stockholm, and "Tennessee Waltz" with Stian Carstensen in Oslo. The tracklist is as follows:
Critics praised the album for its raw vulnerability and Collier's ability to infuse familiar songs with fresh harmonic layers, offering a contrast to his more orchestral studio work.[78] As of November 2025, Piano Ballads remains Collier's sole full-length live album release.
Extended plays and singles
Collier's extended plays are relatively few, focusing on specialized releases such as alternate takes and seasonal recordings. His first EP, Never Gonna Be Alone (Alternate Versions), was released on December 30, 2022, featuring four variations of the track "Never Gonna Be Alone" from Djesse Vol. 3, including a piano version, a remix by HONNE, an a cappella rendition, and a live performance from the Troubadour with collaborators Lizzy McAlpine and John Mayer.[79]In November 2024, Collier released Three Christmas Songs – An Abbey Road Live To Vinyl Cut, a holiday-themed EP recorded live at Abbey Road Studios using a direct-to-vinyl process. The EP includes covers of "I'll Be Home for Christmas," "Winter Wonderland," and "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," performed with a full band arrangement emphasizing orchestral elements and vocal harmonies. The vinyl pressing was limited to 2,000 copies, available exclusively through his official shop.[80][81]Collier has issued numerous singles, primarily as promotional lead tracks for his albums, often accompanied by official music videos showcasing his multi-layered production and visual storytelling. His debut single, "Hideaway," was released on April 1, 2016, as the lead from In My Room, featuring intricate vocal harmonies and harmonic explorations that established his signature style.[82]Subsequent singles include "Time Alone With You" (January 2020) and "All I Need" (February 2020) from Djesse Vol. 3, both collaborations highlighting his work with artists like Daniel Caesar and Mahalia.[83] For Djesse Vol. 4 (2024), "Welcoming New Friends" (June 2024) served as the lead single, emphasizing ensemble performances.[6]In promotion of his 2025 album The Light For Days, Collier released several singles, including "I Know (A Little)" (September 2025), "Heaven (Butterflies)" (October 2025), and "Keep An Eye On Summer" (August 2025), each featuring thematic videos tied to natural elements and personal introspection.[84][85][86] Additional standalone or collaborative singles include "A Rock Somewhere / The Seed (For Greenpeace)" (2023), a double A-side benefiting environmental causes.[87]
Guest appearances
Collier has contributed guest vocals and harmonies to numerous tracks across genres, often enhancing the harmonic complexity of collaborations with established artists. His appearances span jazz, pop, R&B, and hip-hop, showcasing his versatility as a multi-instrumentalist and arranger. These contributions frequently involve layered vocal arrangements that align with his signature polyphonic style.
These selections highlight Collier's most prominent recording contributions as a guest, emphasizing tracks that achieved commercial success or critical acclaim, such as the Billboard Hot 100-topping "My Universe."[90]
Other credits
Acting roles
Collier began his acting career as a child, performing under the name Jacob Moriarty, which was his legal name at the time derived from his mother's family. His debut role came at age 10 in the Hallmark Channel television musical film A Christmas Carol: The Musical (2004), where he portrayed Tiny Tim Cratchit alongside Kelsey Grammer as Ebenezer Scrooge. Directed by Arthur Allan Seidelman, the production featured Collier in several musical numbers, showcasing his early vocal talents in scenes such as "The Lights of Long Ago" and the finale "A Place Called Home."[95]The following year, Collier appeared in the British comedy series Unhitched (2005), playing the role of Olly aged 10 in one episode of the short-lived BBC Three production. In this role, he depicted a young version of the character Olly, contributing to the show's humorous exploration of relationships and family dynamics. These early acting credits marked Collier's initial foray into performance before he shifted focus primarily to music, though they highlighted his versatility as a young performer.
Opera performances
As a child, Jacob Collier performed the role of Miles, the young boy haunted by supernatural forces, in Benjamin Britten's chamber operaThe Turn of the Screw. This appearance, which took place during his pre-adolescent years in London, profoundly shaped his understanding of harmony, as the opera's intricate chord structures "shattered [his] mind outwards" and ignited his fascination with layered vocal arrangements.[96][13]Collier also sang as one of the three boys in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's The Magic Flute, including a notable production with the English National Opera at the London Coliseum in 2007. At age 13, he reminisced about the experience as a formative moment in his classical training, highlighting the opera's blend of whimsy and precision that influenced his later multi-part vocal improvisations. These schoolboy performances extended to international stages in Spain and Italy, where he explored roles emphasizing treble vocals and ensemble singing.[13][97][98]Additionally, Collier had a speaking role as the child voice of young Wozzeck in Alban Berg's atonal opera Wozzeck, staged at the Royal Opera House in London in 2002 under Keith Warner's direction. This early exposure to expressionist opera's dramatic intensity complemented his classical foundation, though it was the harmonic innovations in Britten and Mozart that most directly informed his signature polyphonic style.[68][98]These juvenile opera engagements, all completed by his mid-teens, marked Collier's initial foray into professionalperformance and underscored his precocious talent as a vocalist, paving the way for his transition to contemporary music production and live improvisation. No further opera roles have been documented in his career to date.[96]
Awards and nominations
Grammy Awards
Jacob Collier has received numerous accolades from the Grammy Awards, earning seven wins and sixteen nominations across multiple categories, primarily in arrangement fields, as of the 68th Annual Grammy Awards nominations in 2025.[99] His achievements highlight his innovative approach to vocal and instrumental layering, with wins spanning his debut album In My Room (2016) and the Djesse series. Collier's Grammy success began early in his career, with two wins at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards in 2017 for arrangements from In My Room. He continued this streak with the Djesse project, earning awards for sophisticated, multi-layered compositions that often feature large ensembles and harmonic complexity. His wins are concentrated in categories recognizing arrangement prowess, reflecting his self-taught expertise in music theory and production. Beyond wins, notable nominations include three for Album of the Year—for Djesse Vol. 3 (2022), Coldplay's Music of the Spheres (2023), and Djesse Vol. 4 (2025)—positioning him among elite contemporary artists.[100] In 2025, he received a nomination for Best Global Music Performance for "A Rock Somewhere" from Djesse Vol. 4.[99]The following table summarizes Collier's Grammy wins:
Cover from Djesse Vol. 4; performed live at the ceremony.[105]
Collier's nominations extend to other areas, such as Best R&B Performance for "With You Always" (2021) and Best Jazz Instrumental Album for Djesse Vol. 2 (2021), demonstrating his versatility across genres.[106] In the 68th Annual Grammy Awards (2026), he earned a nomination for Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals for "Keep An Eye On Summer."[99] These honors affirm his status as a prolific arranger and producer, often collaborating with artists like Quincy Jones and Daniel Caesar, whose influences appear in his Grammy-recognized works.[32]
Other awards
In addition to his Grammy successes, Jacob Collier has received recognition from several prestigious British music institutions for his innovative contributions to jazz, composition, and digital engagement. These honors highlight his impact on contemporary music education and performance.In 2016, Collier won the Digital Initiative of the Year award at the Jazz FM Awards, acknowledging his groundbreaking use of YouTube to share harmonic explorations and multi-layered videos that attracted millions of views and revitalized interest in jazz theory among younger audiences.[107] He was also nominated in the same year for Breakout Artist of the Year.[108]Three years later, in 2019, Collier was honored with the PRS for Music Gold Award at the Jazz FM Awards, presented for his exceptional compositions and arrangements that blend genres, including his debut album In My Room, which earned him prior acclaim in 2016.[109] This special award recognizes lifetime achievement in jazz performance and innovation.Collier has been nominated twice for Best Jazz Act at the MOBO Awards, first in 2016 alongside artists like Nubiyan Twist, and again in 2021 with nominees including Sons of Kemet and Alfa Mist, though he did not win either time.[110][111]In 2023, the Royal Academy of Music, where Collier studied jazz piano, elected him as an Honorary Member and Fellow (FRAM), one of its highest honors, for his profound influence on music education and creation as a composer, arranger, and performer.[112]At the 2024 O2 Silver Clef Awards, organized by Nordoff and Robbins, Collier received the Oak View Group Innovation in Music Award, celebrating his pioneering audience participation techniques and genre-defying productions that have expanded live music experiences globally.[113]