JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Jahaan Sweet, a Grammy Award-winning producer and songwriter, went from Jacksonville to The Juilliard School with a purpose to collaborate that’s earned him respect from music industry megastars.
Watch the full interview with Sweet below.
Sweet, who began piano at 6 and studied jazz at LaVilla School of the Arts before attending Douglas Anderson School of the Arts and graduating from Juilliard, said the instrument shaped his approach to making records.
“Piano really is an accompanying instrument,” he said. “That instrument was made to help other musicians sound good…My mentality is always go in the room and help them do whatever they want to do.”
He said that whatever they’re trying to convey musically, translates to production, which is then translated to songwriting.
Sweet credited his first teacher, Cynthia Blaylock, with recognizing his talent and keeping him at the piano.
“She saw something in me that my parents didn’t see,” he said. “I wasn’t even really that into it, but she was just like, ‘Hey, he’s really good at this.’”
His parents wouldn’t let him quit either. He wanted to play sports, though he wasn’t good at them.
“I was like, ‘Yo, I don’t want to do this, I want to play sports, whatever I was in was the excuse,” he said. “I wasn’t the most gifted in sports at that age, but my parents were like, ‘yo you’re not quitting.’”
He joined a jazz band program in the 6th grade and played with some older musicians and learned to love piano.
“That helped shape me as a musician and that’s when I fell in love with piano so when I started playing jazz and see how I could be around my friends and collaborate with them, because jazz is a collaborative music so that kind of just shaped my whole identity,” he said.
He then learned that he could make money through this foundation of collaboratively creating music. That was when he took music seriously as an art form.
He started playing in his church, St. Paul AME and they paid him at 12 years old to play in the band.
“I got paid to do something I love to do,” Sweet said. “At that point I was like, oh, I can make money now.”
‘I had to shape up’: Juilliard and the grind
He graduated from Douglas Anderson School of Arts and going to Juilliard was something that he said offhand as a child, not knowing that it could be a reality.
“I was just trying to shock people,” he said of wanting to go to Juilliard. “But the idea didn’t really become a reality until I fell in love with jazz...then I realized, ‘Oh shoot, like this may really happen.’”
He said he was ready to leave Jacksonville after Douglas Anderson. He felt the best move he could make to progress his career was to move to New York in Juilliard’s jazz program.
Sweet said Juilliard tested him. “I was ready to drop out,” he admitted, recalling a low point during his first year. He told his cousin, comedian Lil Duval, he was thinking of quitting.
“He called my dad and said, ‘Yo, let me tell you what your son said,’” Sweet recalled. “My dad called me, cursed me out. My mom called and cursed me out…you drop out, you ain’t getting nothing from us.”
The reprimand helped him refocus.
“I had to shape up,” Sweet said. He improved his grades, completed his coursework and graduated. “It’s a different level of detail that I had to give to the music, but once I got it, it was easy,” he said.
After adjusting to Juilliard’s rigorous training, he said, he found a routine that worked for him.
Breakthroughs and collaborations
While still a student, Sweet began getting placements and meeting collaborators. He said he met R&B singer Kehlani through local New York producers Jeff Robinson and David Harris, also known as Swagg R’Celious, and worked on her “Cloud 19″ EP, including the breakout song “Get Away.”
“[Nick Cannon] sent [Kehlani] to work with Swagg and I met her there,” he said. “She [said] ‘I like Jahaan’ and we were both young so it was just like hey let’s make more music and that kept happening.”
Just one year after graduating from Juilliard, Sweet earned a Grammy nomination for his collaboration on Kehlani’s acclaimed mixtape “You Should Be Here” while they were on tour together.
“It was crazy,” he said. “It was cool. It was cool. Great moments for sure.”
He relocated to Los Angeles to make more music with Kehlani and for the tour, but after a while, he realized he wanted to spend more time in the studio rather than the road.
While in L.A., he met Matthew Jehu Samuels, professionally known as Boi-1da, whose collaborations include Drake, Eminem, Kendrick Lamar, Rihanna and more. Sweet credited a lot of his professional success and connections he’s made to Samuels.
“Boi‑1da forever is a big, big, big, big, big reason why I’m successful with production,” he said. “He just wanted me to be next to him. I learned a lot just watching him.”
In 2022, he won a Grammy Award for his contributions to Jon Batiste’s Album of the Year, “We Are.” He received the award in the mail and shared the moment with his mother.
Sweet has contributed to projects for Beyoncé — including work on “Renaissance” — Jay‑Z and Drake, and he was part of sessions with Ye (formerly Kanye West) and Travis Scott on the song “Father.”
“It was a humbling experience,” he said of working with Ye and Travis. “I’m just here to help whatever is going on.”
Jacksonville native André Troutman is also credited on Ye’s album “Bully." Troutman is also sharing the stage with Ye on his international tour, providing vocals using a talkbox instrument. To have two musicians from the River City on an artist of Ye’s magnitude is no small accomplishment.
“Two people doing things on that scale...I was like, man, this is so great and so great for the city.” Sweet said of he and Troutman representing Jacksonville on the world stage.
With all the accomplishments, credits and accolades, there’s still at least one thing that Sweet desires: a No. 1 record.
“I’m always just trying to be better every day. That’s just a checklist thing. It’s something that I just want to be like, ‘OK, I finally did it,’” he said.
He said he isn’t chasing it, but he knows it will happen when it’s supposed to happen.
“Just staying diligent in the process,” Sweet said.
Sweet said he hopes to collaborate with artists Bruno Mars, Frank Ocean and SZA.
‘It means so much’: Riverfront Music Garden, giving back
Sweet said being honored in Jacksonville with his name on the Riverfront Music Garden Walk of Fame felt deeply meaningful.
“To be honored by the city I grew up in…it means so much,” he said.
Through his company, The Sweet Life, Sweet said he prefers hands‑on mentorship.
“I try to get very direct with people — meeting them in person, exchanging texts. That’s my way of truly giving back,” he said.
Sweet urged aspiring musicians to think beyond their hometowns.
“Dream the biggest dream you can dream, and then go chase that,” he said. “There’s a way bigger world out there.”
Behind the board I am...
“I’m a collaborator.” He added, “That’s what the synergy for me is: collaboration, even if it’s not music, just being with people you want to be around or doing things with people you respect, admire, love, whatever it is, life is collaboration to me.”
Collaboration is a word that Sweet often said when talking about how he originally fell in love with piano, the beginning of his taking music seriously as an art form.
That desire for collaboration has led him into rooms with the world’s biggest artists.
“I use my skill to help me be better at collaborating...with other people...train my brain to be able to walk into any room and we have some kind of common understanding,” Sweet said.
