Real Bodies: Jamsheed Master ‘bears’ all, from music to OnlyFans, in six intimate images
Music composer Jamsheed Master tells Attitude about learning to love his body to the extent that he started an OnlyFans account
Jamsheed Master‘s story is music to our ears… and eyes. By day, he’s a globe-trotting concert pianist and choral composer, creating songs of hope and protest for queer choirs around the world. By night, he’s an adult content creator on OnlyFans, embracing his body, spreading joy, and proving that confidence only gets hotter with age. Now in his forties, Jamsheed has never felt more attractive. Once self-conscious about being big and hairy, he celebrates every inch of himself in Attitude’s Real Bodies feature.
I am a composer of choral music and an adult content creator on OnlyFans. I started creating my adult content only one year ago. I’m in my forties now, but when I was in my twenties and thirties, I didn’t feel that hot. I didn’t feel as though I was an attractive person. I was always bigger, always hairier. And now I’m a little older, all of those things are positives rather than the negatives they used to be. I’m big, I’m hairy, and it turns out lots of people love that. I have never felt more hot than I do now. I’ve been self-conscious about my belly forever, but I’ve grown to love it and now fully accept that we may never see my abs – and that’s OK!



You’d expect to get feedback about your body when you put it out there on social platforms, but actually most comments I get are about feelings – the vibe I’m bringing, positivity, spreading joy. I see other creators responding to negative comments in brilliantly cutting ways, but that feels like fishing in murky waters to me. Why feed the haters when the lovers are more hungry?
Like most creators, I get some strange requests on OnlyFans for custom content and a lot of feet requests. It’s trickier than it sounds though: there are only so many angles from which you can film your feet and they don’t really do anything. Any tips?
“The two careers seem to rub along unexpectedly well”
I do my adult content work alongside my music work. The two careers seem to rub along unexpectedly well. I’m dealing only with adults in all my worlds, so one has never really affected the other.

As a musician, I perform as a concert pianist and sing. I have performed on cruise ships and around the world — all seven continents. In my work as a composer, I create new music for queer choirs around the world. LGBTQIA+ choirs are vital community hubs, and right now they need new music to sing.
There is so much going on in the queer world at the moment, so many terrible things happening, so many rights being reversed, and choirs provide such an important community for so many people. I create new songs of hope and protest specifically for them. I post a new song on my website every couple of weeks.

When I was younger, I used to play the piano at The Criterion, a fancy little restaurant on Piccadilly. It was often full of celebrities, and one night Joan Rivers was in. After her dinner, she came and whispered in my ear, “Honey, you’re the best thing in here,” and left without paying her bill. The manager was furious and demanded to know what she’d said to me. But Joan suddenly reappeared having visited a cash machine and gave me a gigantic tip and the manager a scathing lecture on how to cook steak. She inspired me as a performer. Her stand-up show will teach you everything you need to know about performing.
“Every element, every cell, every being in nature is unique and vital”
I was born in London after my parents (a fashion designer and a banking computing engineer) migrated here in the 1970s. My heritage is ancient Persian. My family are Parsi, descended from Persians who migrated to India in the eighth century. They are a small but influential community of pacifists who follow the Zoroastrian religion. It’s one of the oldest, based on early astrology and knowledge of the sun and science.
I actually follow a pagan path, which is centred around nature, the sun and the seasons. It’s deeply connected to our island of Britain in a clear, physical way, which you can see happening as each year progresses. Every element, every cell, every being in nature is unique and vital, and we as humans are part of that — queer or otherwise. It’s simple, centred around our star, and totally inclusive, which is why I love the gentle pagan path.
This is an excerpt from a feature appearing in Attitude’s January/February 2026 issue.
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