EPK

Emily Sara

Bio

Emily Sara is a Brooklyn-based singer songwriter blending indie pop, R&B, and cinematic influences into music that reclaims power through vulnerability. A classically trained vocalist turned genre-bending artist, Emily writes from the perspective of mythic women, personal memory, and inherited resilience, drawing on her Middle Eastern heritage and lived experiences to create deeply emotional, femme-forward songs.

Her upcoming EP Big Talk is a phoenix-era project, born of heartbreak, healing, and hard-won self-trust. With lyrics that unearth what’s been left unsaid and production helmed by an all-women team, the record is both a reclamation and a reintroduction.

Emily’s sound echoes the soul-baring of Amy Winehouse, the boldness of Chappell Roan, and the lyrical precision of Fiona Apple, with a voice that moves between classical strength and contemporary edge. Whether on stage with her band or behind a piano, she invites you into a world where femme freedom is loud, lush, and unafraid.

Music

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Music *

Highlights:

  • 3 new singles released leading up to Big Talk EP drop - 2 more to come.

  • 2,939 Spotify listeners increase of 164% in the last month.

  • 200 new followers in the last month.

  • 404 playlist adds in the last month.

  • Featured by Women that Rock.

  • Featured in New Wave Music, Archodia, Divine Magazine, Caesar Live and Loud, ExtravaFrench, Ragworld, Grl Mag and more.

  • 50+ draw at NYC gigs.

Press

Emily provides a beautifully drawing performance that showcases the delicate factors within her vocals & highlights the lyrical poetry of this song…this composition is a classic example of the poetically sublime lyrical talents she carries.
— Fierce and Fabulous Revolution

Canvas Rebel

The Other Side Reviews


Rattler

Bold Journey



An absolutely gorgeous new single from Emily Sara comes through with such a robust personality and character that you end up getting attached right from the start … the single has a way of wrapping itself around you and keeping you right where it wants to
— Rag Mag