Emel Mathlouthi

Singer-songwriter

Popular As Emel

Birthday January 11, 1982

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Tunis, Tunisia

Age 42 years old

Nationality Tunisia

#54813 Most Popular

1982

Emel Mathlouthi (آمال المثلوثي) also known as Emel, born 11 January 1982), is a Tunisian-American singer-songwriter, musician, arranger and producer. She rose to fame with her protest song "Kelmti Horra" ("My Word is Free"), which became an anthem for the Tunisian Revolution and the Arab Spring. Her first studio album, also titled Kelmti Horra, was released worldwide in 2012 to critical acclaim: she combined Arabic roots with western influence. Her second album, Ensen, was released in 2017, blending electronica with classical music. On Everywhere We Looked Was Burning in 2019, she sang all the lyrics in English.

2006

In 2006 she was a finalist in the Prix RMC Moyen-Orient Musique competition.

2008

She decided to move to Paris, France in 2008 when the Tunisian government banned her songs from radio and TV.

Although banned from Tunisian airwaves, bootlegs of her live performances in France circulated on the internet in Tunisia.

After the death of Mohamed Bouazizi she dedicated an Arabic version of the Joan Baez song "Here's To You" to him.

2011

In early 2011, she was recorded on the Avenue Habib Bourguiba singing "Kelmti Horra" to protesters and it became a viral video.

2012

Emel Mathlouthi released her debut, Kelmti Horra, in January 2012.

It received critical acclaim.

In a four out of five star review, The Guardian praised the album for twisting together Arabic roots with western flavours – some rock but mostly cavernous trip-hop.

"The mix works well on stand-outs "Dhalem" and "Ma Ikit", where Mathlouthi's striking vocals find most melody; elsewhere, the understandably serious mood of protest and sadness flatlines somewhat. A powerful new voice, none the less".

The album was influenced by Joan Baez, Massive Attack, and Björk.

As a politically aware musician, the songs in the album have made promising duty to speak out on any injustice that Emel has witnessed about her beloved Tunisia.

While she sings about humanity and a better world, the success of this album has made her to reach many more people in different parts of the world.

She gave concerts in Egypt and Iraq, and performed in Canada at the Vancouver Folk Music Festival and the Festival du Monde Arabe de Montréal.

At the beginning of July 2012, she gave a groundbreaking concert in Baghdad, Iraq.

On 28 July she gave a concert at the Sfinks Festival in Belgium, where she received a standing ovation for her cover of the Leonard Cohen song "Hallelujah".

2013

In 2013, after her first concert in Cairo since the revolution, Ahram Online described her as "The Fairuz of her generation".

She opened for Dead Can Dance in the festival Les nuits de Fourvière in Lyon and performed at the WOMAD Festival at Charlton Parkin the UK.

Israeli authorities refused to let her enter Ramallah to perform, so she sang in front of a camera in Jordan.

The small show was broadcast to the Palestinian audience in a theater in Ramallah.

As the song, "Kelmti Horra" (My Word is Free), was considered as "the anthem of the Arab Spring," it has been Emel's most famous song so far.

2015

The outstanding success of this song led her to perform it on 11 December 2015, during the award ceremony of the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, which was awarded to the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet.

At the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony, she performed two renditions of her song "Kelmti Horra," one accompanied only by a guitarist, Karim Attoumane, and the other with a full orchestra and chorus.

The concert was hosted by Jay Leno, who praised her in the concert press conference as being the first Arabic-language singer to catch his attention.

During that time, she collaborated with Tricky and provided leading vocals on his song "Emel".

2017

Ensen (Human) was released in February 2017 by Partisan Records.

The album was recorded in seven countries including Iceland, Sweden, France, and the US.

Producers of the album include the former Björk collaborator, Icelandic producer Valgeir Sigurðsson and Emel's main collaborator Franco-Tunisian producer Amine Metani.

Pitchfork hailed the first single off the album, "Ensen Dhaif" (Human, Helpless Human), as "a gorgeously ornamented fusion of towering beats and darkly-shaded Arabic minor scales. Its incendiary tone is conducted by Mathlouthi's galvanic voice, which is at turns vulnerable and strong. On "Ensen Dhaif" you hear a person refusing to compromise, a searing vision founded on real risks and the necessity of truth".

As Mathlouthi explains, the song is dedicated to the "people that have to carry the weight and all the struggles so that a very small percentage can enjoy the power."

The songs of Ensen were then entirely reworked on the remix album Ensenity.

Nine different producers from different backgrounds were invited to accentuate the electronica side of the tracks.

2020

In 2020, the video of her song "Holm" ("A Dream") that she sings in Tunisian Arabic, had been viewed several million times within a few months.

"Holm" was included in the double album The Tunis Diaries which she recorded with just a voice, an acoustic guitar as the sole instrument and a laptop.

Holm is an Arabic remake of the Iranian song "Soltane Ghalbhaa" with music composed by Anoushiravan Rohani and lyrics by Mohammad Ali Shiraz.

She has also collaborated with other artists such as Tricky, Valgeir Sigurðsson, Steve Moore and Vitalic.

Emel Mathlouthi started singing and acting at 8 years old in a suburb of her hometown Tunis.

She wrote her first song when she was 10 years old.

She discovered her strong vocal capacities when she was 15, encouraged by her entourage and inspired by great pop singers of the 90's. She found a strong refuge in heavy metal a bit later and gothic music and formed her first metal band at a university in Tunis when she was 19.

A few years later deeply moved by the voice and ideas of Joan Baez after her bandmate played "The Boxer" for her, she quit the band and began writing political songs, discovering her frustration by the lack of opportunities and the apathy of her compatriots, such as "Ya Tounes Ya Meskina" ("Poor Tunisia").