Justin Tranter

Songwriter

Birthday June 16, 1980

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Hawthorn Woods, Illinois, U.S.

Age 43 years old

Nationality United States

#40450 Most Popular

1966

Tranter received a nominations for the Grammy Award for Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards for their work on songs by Reneé Rapp, Måneskin, Marisa Davila, Baby Tate, Talk, and Miley Cyrus.

Tranter's activism began in high school at the Chicago Academy for the Arts, where they created the annual AIDS Benefit to raise awareness for HIV/AIDS.

This was followed by Musicians with a Mission, a scholarship fund for LGBT youth education that Tranter founded while attending the Berklee College of Music.

1980

Justin Drew Tranter (born June 16, 1980) is an American songwriter, singer, and activist.

Frequently co-writing with Julia Michaels, Tranter has written songs for artists such as Britney Spears, Gwen Stefani, Linkin Park, Kelly Clarkson, Sara Bareilles, Selena Gomez, Justin Bieber, DNCE, Citizen Queen, Kesha, Imagine Dragons, The Knocks, Fifth Harmony, 5 Seconds of Summer, Ariana Grande, Lady Gaga, Raye, Bea Miller, Demi Lovato, Dua Lipa, Måneskin, and Fall Out Boy.

1994

Tranter is also a supporter of Mercy for Animals and stopped eating meat in 1994.

1998

Tranter graduated in 1998.

Following this, they studied at the Berklee College of Music in Boston.

Along with songwriting, they also took classes in business management.

While at Berklee, they founded Musicians with a Mission, a scholarship fund for LGBT youth education.

2002

Tranter released their debut studio album Scratched in 2002 and followed it up with their second studio album Tear Me Together in 2004.

2004

From 2004 to 2014, Tranter was the lead singer of Semi Precious Weapons, a rock band based in New York.

In 2004, following the release of Tear Me Together, Tranter formed the band Semi Precious Weapons in New York with fellow Berklee graduates Cole Whittle, Dan Crean, and Aaron Lee Tasjan; Tasjan was later replaced by Stevy Pyne.

2008

The band's debut studio album We Love You was released in 2008 and the band subsequently opened for Lady Gaga on her Monster Ball Tour from 2009 to 2011.

2010

Semi Precious Weapons released two more albums, You Love You (2010) and Aviation (2014), before disbanding in 2014.

2012

While still part of Semi Precious Weapons, Tranter moved to Los Angeles and signed a publishing deal with Warner Chappell Music in 2012 to write songs for other artists.

After signing with Warner Chappell, Tranter began working with artists such as Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez, Hailee Steinfeld, Fifth Harmony, and Fall Out Boy.

2015

In December 2015, Tranter was named one of the "20 Biggest Breakouts of 2015" by Rolling Stone for their songwriting contributions to the pop charts of that year.

Tranter frequently collaborates with Julia Michaels and multiple songs co-written by the pair have appeared on Billboard charts; two such tracks, Gomez's "Good for You" and Bieber's "Sorry", topped the Mainstream Top 40.

2016

Tranter and Michaels also teamed up to co-write Gwen Stefani's third solo studio album This Is What the Truth Feels Like (2016).

Tranter has since written for artists ranging from Britney Spears and Demi Lovato to Imagine Dragons and Linkin Park.

Tranter has worked on music for film and television.

Tranter flew to Orlando to help in the aftermath of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting.

They also co-wrote and co-organized the release of the charity single "Hands" to raise funds for Equality Florida's Pulse Victims Fund, GLAAD, and the GLBT Community Center of Central Florida.

2017

Since February 2017, they have been a board member of GLAAD, an organization that promotes LGBT acceptance in the entertainment and news industries.

Tranter's songs have garnered over 50 million single sales and 40 billion streams on Spotify and YouTube.

Justin Drew Tranter was born and grew up in Hawthorn Woods, Illinois.

They have three older brothers.

Tranter says that they experienced bullying during their youth, which caused them to be transferred from the Lake Zurich public high school to the Chicago Academy for the Arts after a semester.

While studying musical theater at the Academy, they started the AIDS Benefit, an annual show run by students to raise awareness for HIV/AIDS.

They co-wrote the song "Home" performed by Nick Jonas for the soundtrack to the animated film Ferdinand (2017), which earnt Tranter a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 2018 ceremony.

They also co-wrote "Hindsight", the end title song for Billy Eichner's film Bros (2022).

In February 2017, Tranter joined GLAAD's National Board of Directors.

During the GLAAD Media Awards of that year, Tranter raised $123,000 for the organization by auctioning off four individual songwriting and recording sessions.

Each year, Tranter hosts an in-person Spirit Day concert to raise funds for GLAAD's efforts to support LGBT youth.

The fourth annual event in 2022 raised $400,000.

2019

On November 17, 2019, Tranter was honored with the ACLU of Southern California's Bill of Rights Award for their activist work as "an outspoken and powerful voice for the LGBTQIA+ community, diversity, the climate crisis, arts education, animal rights, and ending gun violence".

Tranter is bisexual, gender nonconforming, and non-binary.

They have stated that, with regard to pronouns, "they/them/theirs is what I relate to the most".

2020

Furthermore, Tranter was an executive producer and songwriter for the soundtracks to the Hulu film Happiest Season (2020), Billy Porter's directorial debut Anything's Possible, the Netflix film Purple Hearts (both 2022), the Paramount+ Grease prequel television series Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies (2023), and Larin Sullivan's film The Young King.