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Emel Mathlouthi Tickets, Tour Dates and Concert
Emel Mathlouthi Tickets, Tour Dates and Concert

Emel MathlouthiVerified

19,276 Followers
• 10 Upcoming Shows
10 Upcoming Shows
Never miss another Emel Mathlouthi concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
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No upcoming shows in your city
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Latest Post

Emel Mathlouthi
18 days ago
MRA WORLD TOUR
New shows in 1 month ♥️
Limited tickets, don't forget to book 💃🏽
Tickets: https://linktr.ee/emelmathlouthi
Emel Mathlouthi's tour

Live Photos of Emel Mathlouthi

Emel Mathlouthi at Washington, DC in Union Stage 2025
View All Photos

Fan Reviews

Fly
June 26th 2025
Came for Emel and her message! Mesmerizing, strong, fragile... And a voice of power. If you have the chance to see her perform, go! You will not regret it!
Groningen, Netherlands@
SPOT Groningen
Zephyr
February 23rd 2025
Epic evening with an ethereal artist at a cozy, intimate venue. Highly recommend any music lovers or liberation activists to do yourself a favor and get a ticket to her nearest show coming up. You won't be disappointed by the experience.
Seattle, WA@
Madame Lou's
Aisha
February 19th 2025
The night was Epic her voice was magical
Seattle, WA@
Madame Lou's
View More Fan Reviews

About Emel Mathlouthi

Emel rose to prominence after her 2007 recording "Kelmti Horra (My Word Is Free)" became a viral anthem during the Arab Spring, earning her the title "voice of the Tunisian revolution" and eventually an invitation to perform at the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize ceremony. Her powerful, heartfelt music defies genres, melding together electronica, Tunisian textures and a cinematic universe. Combining the political and the personal, Emel expresses not just her feelings but those of so many people. "It is important to me to try to give voice to the silenced. I also believe, though, that art is its own message, that especially when you come from a repressive place, or an ignored place, the simple act of saying, 'Hey, I'm here,' is important - the art of presence and insistence."

On her sophomore album, Ensen, Emel distills her blend of acoustic and electronic sounds into a style that's even more uniquely her own, citing Ben Frost, Samaris and James Blake as influences. With several producers, including Valgeir Sigurðsson (Sigur Ros, Feist) and her main collaborator French/Tunisian producer Amine Metani, Emel recorded the new album across seven countries and two continents. "We recorded acoustic takes of the songs, using a lot of North African drumming. Then we started creating our own library of organic beats running the percussions through our homemade effects and setups. They sounded like nothing we'd ever heard." "Ensen Dhaif (Helpless Human)," the title track, is propelled by sparkling gumbri (a Tunisian three stringed big bass lute, used in Gnawa music), feverish zukra (Tunisian flute), trance inducing bendirs (North African frame drums) and heavy kick drum.

Emel's music has motivated many to express themselves, and she fights particularly hard to be a pillar of strength for women worldwide. "Everyone assumes there is a man directing or 'pulling the strings' behind a female artist" she says. "It is unbelievable the macho attitudes I've had to overcome to make this album. I hope people see Ensen as a reminder that women create every day and a testament to the strength it can take to do so."

Since her debut in 2011 with Kelmti Horra (My Word is Free), a track which became a hymn to freedom in the middle of the Arab Spring, Emel has not stopped releasing revolutionary albums, where she collaborated with the composer behind Björk and Sigur Rós.

Her fourth album, MRA, which means “woman” in Arabic, is a pop, world, electro manifesto for female emancipation. That’s why every single collaborator on MRA, from producers and featured artists to musicians and beyond, is a woman, marginalized in recognition but outsized in ability.

The result is a multi-genre meld where African trap, batucada, Arabic reggaeton, hip-hop, and drum-and-bass rub shoulders seamlessly with vibrant melodies and empowering lyrics.

Emel has come a long way. She has established herself as an avant-garde artist on the international scene, delivering groundbreaking performances such as being invited to sing at the Nobel Prize ceremony and collaborating with artists like Valgeir Sigurðsson, Tricky, Barbara Pravi, Bachar Mar-Khalifé, and Vitalic, and most recently with Acid Arab on the song Lose My Mind, from her latest album MRA.
Show More
Genres:
Alternative, Electronica, North African New Sounds, World Music
Hometown:
New York, New York

No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to Emel Mathlouthi to play in your city
Request a Show

Latest Post

Emel Mathlouthi
18 days ago
MRA WORLD TOUR
New shows in 1 month ♥️
Limited tickets, don't forget to book 💃🏽
Tickets: https://linktr.ee/emelmathlouthi

Live Photos of Emel Mathlouthi

Emel Mathlouthi at Washington, DC in Union Stage 2025
View All Photos
Emel Mathlouthi's tour

Fan Reviews

Fly
June 26th 2025
Came for Emel and her message! Mesmerizing, strong, fragile... And a voice of power. If you have the chance to see her perform, go! You will not regret it!
Groningen, Netherlands@
SPOT Groningen
Zephyr
February 23rd 2025
Epic evening with an ethereal artist at a cozy, intimate venue. Highly recommend any music lovers or liberation activists to do yourself a favor and get a ticket to her nearest show coming up. You won't be disappointed by the experience.
Seattle, WA@
Madame Lou's
Aisha
February 19th 2025
The night was Epic her voice was magical
Seattle, WA@
Madame Lou's
View More Fan Reviews

About Emel Mathlouthi

Emel rose to prominence after her 2007 recording "Kelmti Horra (My Word Is Free)" became a viral anthem during the Arab Spring, earning her the title "voice of the Tunisian revolution" and eventually an invitation to perform at the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize ceremony. Her powerful, heartfelt music defies genres, melding together electronica, Tunisian textures and a cinematic universe. Combining the political and the personal, Emel expresses not just her feelings but those of so many people. "It is important to me to try to give voice to the silenced. I also believe, though, that art is its own message, that especially when you come from a repressive place, or an ignored place, the simple act of saying, 'Hey, I'm here,' is important - the art of presence and insistence."

On her sophomore album, Ensen, Emel distills her blend of acoustic and electronic sounds into a style that's even more uniquely her own, citing Ben Frost, Samaris and James Blake as influences. With several producers, including Valgeir Sigurðsson (Sigur Ros, Feist) and her main collaborator French/Tunisian producer Amine Metani, Emel recorded the new album across seven countries and two continents. "We recorded acoustic takes of the songs, using a lot of North African drumming. Then we started creating our own library of organic beats running the percussions through our homemade effects and setups. They sounded like nothing we'd ever heard." "Ensen Dhaif (Helpless Human)," the title track, is propelled by sparkling gumbri (a Tunisian three stringed big bass lute, used in Gnawa music), feverish zukra (Tunisian flute), trance inducing bendirs (North African frame drums) and heavy kick drum.

Emel's music has motivated many to express themselves, and she fights particularly hard to be a pillar of strength for women worldwide. "Everyone assumes there is a man directing or 'pulling the strings' behind a female artist" she says. "It is unbelievable the macho attitudes I've had to overcome to make this album. I hope people see Ensen as a reminder that women create every day and a testament to the strength it can take to do so."

Since her debut in 2011 with Kelmti Horra (My Word is Free), a track which became a hymn to freedom in the middle of the Arab Spring, Emel has not stopped releasing revolutionary albums, where she collaborated with the composer behind Björk and Sigur Rós.

Her fourth album, MRA, which means “woman” in Arabic, is a pop, world, electro manifesto for female emancipation. That’s why every single collaborator on MRA, from producers and featured artists to musicians and beyond, is a woman, marginalized in recognition but outsized in ability.

The result is a multi-genre meld where African trap, batucada, Arabic reggaeton, hip-hop, and drum-and-bass rub shoulders seamlessly with vibrant melodies and empowering lyrics.

Emel has come a long way. She has established herself as an avant-garde artist on the international scene, delivering groundbreaking performances such as being invited to sing at the Nobel Prize ceremony and collaborating with artists like Valgeir Sigurðsson, Tricky, Barbara Pravi, Bachar Mar-Khalifé, and Vitalic, and most recently with Acid Arab on the song Lose My Mind, from her latest album MRA.
Show More
Genres:
Alternative, Electronica, North African New Sounds, World Music
Hometown:
New York, New York

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