Braxton Olita

Braxton Olita

Olita, in Lodz, Poland (November 2011)
Background information
Birth name Braxton Olita
Born (1985-09-17) 17 September 1985
Honolulu, Hawaii
Genres Pop, rock, reggae
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, keyboards acoustic guitar ukulele, drums
Years active 2004–present
Associated acts Kiiara, Kid Cudi, Ceelo Green, Ashlee Simpson, Thirty Seconds to Mars, Barry Mojo Bradford, Stormi Henley, Chris Brown
Website braxtonsdiary.com

Braxton Olita (born September 17, 1985) is an American musician and vocalist . Born in Honolulu, Hawaii, Olita has worked with artist Ashlee Simpson, rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars, his band U.G.L.Y., signed to Chris Brown's recording label CBE, Ceelo Green, Kid Cudi, Kiiara

Early life

Braxton Olita was born on September 17, 1985, in the city of Honolulu, Hawaii, to Kito and Janice Marie Villarreal Olita. He attended James Campbell School [1] in Ewa Beach, Hawaii, where he is currently living. Olita became interested in music very early. As a child he learned to play the ukulele by listening to Roy Sakuma lessons, a popular Hawaiian teacher. Soon he could easily repeat songs and chords only by hearing them. He got his first acoustic guitar from his uncle. He knew from a very young age he wanted to make a music career. During High School he continued writing his own songs following his mother's advice. As a teenager Olita was also a sponsored skateboarder riding for Emerica, Split Clothing, T&C Surf, participating in local competitions and was video/photo journaling for skateboarding website 50-50.com. In elementary, Olita would wake up early enough to surf before going to school.[2]

Music career

Olita after Thirty Seconds to Mars show (November 2011, Lodz, Poland)

In 2004 Braxton joined Ashlee Simpson's [1] band as a guitarist. In 2004 and 2005 he took part in two concert tours which were promoting two albums: "Autobiography" and "I am me". He also appeared in such music videos as "La La", "Pieces Of Me", "Shadow", "Boyfriend", "I Am Me", "L.O.V.E" and also in two episodes of "The Ashlee Simpson Show" broadcast by MTV. From 2009 to 2011 Braxton was involved in cooperation with Thirty Seconds to Mars.[3] During a two-year concert tour promoting "This Is War" album, Braxton was playing keyboard and rhythm guitar. On 12 August 2011 he also performed as a Mars crew vocalist, the band which was supporting Thirty Seconds to Mars during their concert in Nuremberg. During all that time, Braxton was working also on his debut album which was supposed to be released soon and also was giving his own acoustic concerts. He has released two music videos for his two songs: "How would you feel" (directed by Justin Potter) and "If it wasn't true" (directed by Aaron McMullen), yet.

In 2012 Olita joined music group U.G.L.Y., signed to Chris Brown's recording label CBE with fellow artists Barry "Mijo" Bradford, Stormi Henley and Ethan.

In 2015 Olita started touring again as a Musical Director playing keyboards & guitar with Ceelo Green, Kid Cudi, & Kiiara while releasing new solo works "Serve It" & "Meant For Me" a flipped version of Justin Bieber's song "All That Matters".

Personal life

Among all his interests there is also a place for photography. Braxton is an author of many photo sessions for instance for Ray Brady (Ashlee Simpson's guitarist) and "Runner Runner" band. Since 2009 he has been running a photoblog documenting his journeys during concert tour. Braxton is very open to his fans. During his tours with Thirty Seconds to Mars he could have been easily met at the shows, surrounded by a group of his listeners, playing guitar and singing his songs songs with fans.

References

  1. 1 2 Ricardo, F. Lo (May 18, 2006). "Ashlee Simpsons boyfriend is half Pinoy". The Philippine Star. PhilSTAR Daily, Inc. Retrieved December 18, 2011.
  2. Ramos, Michelle (June 28, 2004). "Ready to rock". Star Bulletin. Retrieved December 18, 2011.
  3. "Staff" (February 16, 2011). "30 Seconds To Mars announce Boston show". Boston Music Spotlight. Retrieved December 19, 2011.

External links

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