Jorge Wilson‘s fresh EP, JPW, serves as a crystal-clear introduction to his evolving solo artistry. The Stoke-on-Trent musician from the UK keeps his approach refreshingly straightforward—blending indie pop with those warm, nostalgic textures that hit just right.
You’ll catch echoes of Mac DeMarco, Steve Lacy, and The 1975 floating in the background. But Wilson’s own voice? That’s what really anchors everything.
The EP tackles those universal themes we all know too well: love, distance, and that hard-earned acceptance that comes after everything falls apart. Wilson’s approach stays refreshingly subtle throughout.
Those early tracks feel almost hesitant—like he’s testing the waters. The production choices leave certain edges intentionally rough, unpolished in the best way possible.
But as JPW progresses, something shifts. The sound gradually warms and expands, revealing both emotional growth and newfound musical confidence brewing beneath the surface.
🎵 Stay in the loop with new music releasesSign up and have the latest releases and meanings sent right to your inbox.
What really gives JPW its punch is the clear intention driving every decision. "I like to think people will be taken on a journey of me developing my craft by each track," Wilson explains, and honestly? You can hear that evolution happening in real-time.
The result isn’t just an EP that introduces his sound—it’s an invitation into the messy, beautiful process of artistic becoming.