Growing up Jeff Wight sometimes felt like he just did not fit in.
But eventually, he found something that made him feel understood. Music.
And it is a relationship that has been growing ever since.
"Music helped me find my voice," Wight told Guardian Media.
And it's a voice that Wight has been using ever since.
Now known as Will the Wolf, Wight has been making waves with his love; music.
And it is no "fake love".
Although he does have a song with that name alongside Preedy (Akeem Chance) and Mical Teja (Mical Teja Williams).
"What if my best isn't better than your worst," Will the Wolf sings in his song Bang.
And it's a question that Wight has been asking himself when it comes to music as he tries to push the envelope in the type of music coming out of T&T.
Wight is currently working on an album. "Originally, before I came out as an artist, I recorded one. 10 full tracks I believe. Then I thought to myself… why? No one's asking for one," he said.
So Wight released singles until he had more of a following.
According to Spotify Wight has over four thousand monthly listeners.
"Now that I think enough people have asked, I figure, it’s time," he said.
Wight said the album is a recently started endeavour.
"I’m really grateful to work with Andre “Dre Major” Stewart. I say his full name because I think he’d get a kick out of it. Amazing sound engineer and a great friend," Wight said.
Other than that Wight is working on some new shoots as well.
He is also a visual artist.
"I hope that I can continue creating work that seems to drive discussion and thought. I want to create things that people haven’t quite seen before. I want people to see themselves in the work. I want people to believe. I want people to feel like they can be themselves. I want Trinbagonians to see something different from what they’re used to. We’re such a beautiful people & such a beautiful culture, but I think at times we can be a little too close-minded. I also think we fail to see our own potential," he said.
Wight said a lot of young supporters have been reaching out to him to thank him for what he has been doing.
They too have been finding music as a way to fit in.
"It’s amazing to think that I could encourage others. I worry that I do not do enough. I do not want to shirk the responsibility of having that sort of influence. I do not want to disappoint the people that support me. I feel like they deserve more," he said.
"I want them to feel that they can follow their passions in a way that will give them a deep sense of pride & belonging," Wight said.