Some artists definitely have the talent and voice that should be heard across and around the globe. It’s just sad when such talent hasn’t had the type of exposure it should get or deserve. John Paul Cooper, known better as JP Cooper, is getting his start at what his music potential deserves. Born in Middleton, England in 1983, this English singer brings a whole different light to the world of music. Not only is it JP Cooper's own distinctive voice but it’s his own style that he brings to the music table. Best known for being featured on the Jonas Blue single "Perfect Strangers", the song was certified platinum in the UK. His follow-up solo single is "September Song" and he is now signed to Island Records. “September Song” brings us all back… back to a time of our teens. Almost no care in the world or our surroundings. We lived life from one weekend to the next. News was just something we seen on television as we waited for the next new song to be played on MTV. Real news to us revolved around school, people (usually the popular ones), and events (consisting of weekend parties). Most of all, was the teenage romance that wrapped it all up… that’s if you even had any romance during these years of pimples and hormones. If not, then it was most likely goofing around with close friends… at one of their homes or in public. “September Song” tells the story of that one love that some of us may have had and whom we always remember. I mean, face it! It was our teen years, we didn’t really know anything about true love. We definitely knew how to have fun and run amuck though. But with that special someone around, all the time in the world just seemed to stop and everything seemed just right. No wonder, those type of relationships always seemed beautiful like a song. A song that always stuck in your head, where you know every lyric, every part of the story, and even at the end of it, you wished it could keep going. Either that, or you just play it again! But even with that, it’s never as sweet as the first time you experienced it. Here’s JP Cooper’s “September Song”: