Photo by Frosta Woods
There’s a certain kind of pop music made for the hours after midnight, the moments where your emotion feels louder, thoughts spiral out, and everything becomes more dramaticize and cinematic. Jack Hawitt has built his world inside that space.
The London-based artist and songwriter has quietly become one of modern pop’s most streamed and versatile collaborators, gaining over 150 million streams while working across projects connected to Ava Max, Megan Thee Stallion, Pharrell Williams, and Freya Skye. His music has also found its way into major television and global campaigns, from Love Island UK to releases through Netflix.
Hawitt blends cinematic electronic pop with stripped-back piano, where his songwriting leans into obsession, heartbreak, intimacy, and the kind of late night honesty that can’t really exist in daylight. His latest project, How Much Further To Paradise, pushes that atmosphere even further, unfolding like one continuous emotional spiral, where tracks bleed seamlessly into one another as the record moves between vulnerability and tension.
“All for You” centers itself around devotion, loss, and the lingering weight of loving someone beyond the point of reason. The song feels like a release of emotions, ones too hard to carry without letting them out into the world. What do we do or say when you’ve found the one? How much of yourself gets lost and consumed with them? That’s what Hawiit’s track explores. It unfolds naturally, allowing silence, restraint, and vulnerability to carry as much weight as the lyrics themselves.
There is something timeless about the kind of heartbreak Jack Hawitt explores in his song “All for You.” Built around soft piano melodies, emotionally raw vocals, and stripped-back songwriting, the track feels deeply intimate without ever becoming overdramatic. Instead the passion is felt with how Hawitt keeps everything painfully direct, allowing the emotion to land through honesty alone.
The warmth in production gives the song its emotional pull. Gentle instrumentation and spacious arrangements leave room for every line to breathe, while Hawitt’s vocal delivery carries a quiet exhaustion that feels deeply familiar. Nothing about the performance feels forced, the emotion comes through in the cracks, the restraint, and the moments where the song chooses softness instead of spectacle.

What makes “All for You” captures the longing, regret, and acceptance that somehow all exists at once.
The track leans into elements of soul, alternative pop, and piano-driven ballads. There are flashes of influence that recall classic late night records built on emotional honesty rather than excess, but Hawitt still manages to make the song feel entirely his own.
Listening to “All for You” feels less like hearing someone perform heartbreak and more like overhearing someone sit with it in real time. Realizing how much love can be all consuming. That intimacy is what gives the track its staying power. With “All for You,” Jack Hawitt delivers a track rooted in vulnerability, restraint, and emotional clarity. It is the kind of song that leaves you with emotional release and validation, proving that sometimes the quietest moments leave the deepest impact.



