Justin Bieber (born March 1, 1994) is a Canadian singer whose career has traced one of the most visible arcs in modern popular music. Discovered online by American music executive Scooter Braun, Bieber was signed to RBMG Records in 2008 and quickly rose to prominence with his debut EP My World (2009). The release introduced him as a teen idol and produced some of the best-selling singles of the era, anchoring his early global fame.
His momentum continued with Under the Mistletoe (2011), which made history as the first Christmas album by a male artist to debut at number one on the US Billboard 200. By the time he released his third studio album, Believe (2012), Bieber had begun shifting away from adolescent pop toward dance-pop and more mature themes, becoming the youngest solo artist to achieve five US number-one albums by the age of 18.
That early success was followed by a turbulent period. Between 2013 and 2014, Bieber faced a series of public controversies and legal issues that significantly altered his image and tested the sustainability of his fame. Rather than retreat, his career pivoted. In 2015, he re-emerged through electronic music, most notably as the lead vocalist on Jack Ü’s “Where Are Ü Now,” which won the Grammy Award for Best Dance/Electronic Recording.
That sound shaped his fourth studio album, Purpose (2015), a critical and commercial resurgence that produced three US number-one singles: “What Do You Mean?”, “Sorry”, and “Love Yourself”. The album marked a turning point, presenting a more reflective and restrained artist while reaffirming his dominance on global charts.
Bieber’s collaborative period that followed further cemented his reach. Between 2016 and 2017, tracks such as “I’m the One” and his remix of “Despacito” reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in consecutive weeks—an industry first. “Despacito” was later named the greatest Latin song of all time by Billboard and earned Bieber his first Latin Grammy Award.
In 2019, he continued expanding across genres with the country collaboration “10,000 Hours” alongside Dan + Shay, which won the Grammy Award for Best Country Duo/Group Performance. Over time, Bieber’s career has come to reflect more than chart success alone—it illustrates the pressures of early fame, the cost of public scrutiny, and the possibility of artistic recalibration in the aftermath.