Farah Elle’s debut album FATIMA is a deeply personal and powerful body of work that reflects her journey of identity, healing, and self-expression. Music has been a sanctuary for Farah since childhood, offering her a vocabulary to process both personal and political experiences—from her family’s rich and complex history in Libya to the challenges of becoming a fearless young woman in modern society. Relocating from Libya to Ireland at eighteen months old, Farah grew up under the shadow of a remarkable lineage: her grandfather was a court martial judge before 1969, her mother served as Libya’s first female Minister for Health after the 2011 revolution, and her paternal grandmother survived years in Italian concentration camps. These threads of power, displacement, and survival caused deep internal conflict, which she began to reconcile through music. She taught herself guitar and piano, wrote poetry, and began channeling pivotal life moments into her songs—"I do this to remove it from my bones," she sings on lead single “Play It By Ear.” Over nearly a decade, these reflections formed the foundation of FATIMA, a coming-of-age record that weaves Arabic melodies with cinematic soundscapes and a commanding lyrical voice.
Farah honed her artistry at BIMM Institute Dublin, graduating in 2016, where she began crafting much of the material that would appear on FATIMA. The album’s opening track, “Silk,” written when she was 19, marked a turning point—her first time integrating traditional Arabic sounds into her music. Since then, Farah has performed at prestigious venues and festivals across Ireland including Vicar Street, The Sugar Club, Electric Picnic, and All Together Now. She collaborated with Irish folk icon Liam Ó Maonlaí for a special RTÉ Radio 1 Folk Awards performance and launched her own podcast TradLines in Autumn 2023. Beyond music, Farah is dedicated to humanitarian efforts, offering music and wellness workshops that use creativity as a tool for healing and empowerment. Her artistry is not just a personal journey but an invitation for others to explore, express, and celebrate their own uniqueness.
Rockstar - N.E.R.D
This is such a timeless jam. It never gets old and it’s a total “f**k you” to anyone who tries to put you down or mimic you. I first heard it when I was 13 years old, feeling like a total outcast in my school. I was also very into hiphop & punk movements at the time and I got so angsty whenever people didn’t know the history behind certain music and it’s origins, which made me reeeeeeally hate on posers. You know how it is, being 13. We cared a bit too much. Anyway the point is, this song kinda celebrates the fact that nobody is the same and trying to be anyone else is useless. It also is such a confidence booster, especially when you’re pursuing a career in music. Not only does it slap but it honestly is such a celebration of being unique and not apologizing for it either. Pharrell Williams & the Neptunes were so good at capturing the essence of hiphop meeting punk rock sensibilities too.
Radio/Video - System of a Down
Yeah I loved S.O.A.D. so much. They were one of the only metal-type bands that I really enjoyed, along with Tool. Again, Artists I listened to in my teenage years. My favourite thing about this song and its’ album, is how it rips the glamorous mask off of Hollywood and what it takes to get there. The sacrifices people make for fame and all of that. They were also quite political as a band. The singer, Serj Tankian, is Armenian and does a lot of activism around the Armenian genocide. I was always inspired by that, I felt like it gave him a lot of depth and integrity. His voice uses really similar melodies that you’d hear in North African sounds, which I felt in my spirit whenever I listened to them. When I was 14, I made a bebo page called “SERJ TANKIAN 4 PRESIDENT”. Hahahah wow, yep, that’s out in the open now.
Baltimore - Nina Simone
This song just makes me want to cry everytime I hear it. Nina Simone is hands down, one of the best songwriters to have ever lived. As well as best performer, pianist, vocalist and general icon. Easily. This song feels like those moments when you’re people-watching on a grey, sad kind of day, in the city – where even the seagulls look like they’re fed up. The way you can sense the pain of a place quite deeply just by observing peoples faces as they go about their day. It’s such a beautiful song and that hook, “ain’t it hard, just to live?” kills me everytime. I used to sit on Balbriggan Beach after school and listen to this song and watch the world go by.
Running Up That Hill - Kate Bush
So everyone always told me to listen to Kate Bush, and I didn’t get around to it until the pandemic when I was living in Killiney for a homeshare during all of 2020. I lived on Killiney Hill Road, so everywhere I went was via some sort of hill. It was the most exercise I had ever done in my life and it was the most in touch with nature I had ever been too. I was swimming in the sea almost everyday as a form of escapism from a kind of difficult living situation. When things got hard and I felt down, sometimes I would just listen to this song to keep me motivated. “If I only could, make a deal with God” – damn. So good. Come to think of it, Kate Bush really helped me out during the first year of the pandemic. I love her passion.
Settle Down - Kimbra
I first heard Kimbra when I was 16 and what always struck me about her was her weird vocal riffs and the amount of cool layers she used. I felt like her voice WAS the music. Her playfulness and almost child-like appearance always made me feel like she was having fun with the music, which is kinda the reason why any of us do it. She also does a sick cover of “Plain Gold Ring” by Nina Simone where she completely made the song her own. It’s not easy to do that with Nina Simone, but Kimbra somehow does a great job. She’s really soulful too. I don’t really know anyone that sounds like her either, she seems authentic and is pretty brilliant.
Pyramids - Frank Ocean
So, I was 17, getting ready to go to the cluuuub for the first time with an old friend of mine. She was basically my cousin. We’re both Libyan and it was extremely taboo for us to be going to a club as two young women. This song mentions Cleopatra working at the pyramids, wearing six inch heels and the rest. We felt like Cleopatra getting ready and we knew we looked great, so we would just spend ages getting ready vibing out to Frank Ocean and preparing for a night out we’d never forget.
Subway - ASA
Ahhhh Asa. She’s kind of like that really important auntie who would influence you hugely while making you feel really safe and held. I felt like Asa understood me. Her voice is so honest, raw and her music is so relatable. I would just listen to Subway over & over again while riding the bus to school. I don’t have much else to say about Asa other than go, go listen to her, get that fix and feel every note.
These Worries - Kid Cudi & Mary J.Blige
This takes me to a very particular summer - coming into my adulthood out of my teen years, laying in my back garden with my friends listening to Kid Cudi and smoking. At the time, I had so much on my mind and I felt like nobody had any idea how difficult it all was. I was looking after myself, my family home, my studies etc. without any proper adult supervision and I had so many responsibilities while trying to just finish school and get into college. It manifested as back problems at the time. “These worries are heavy, they rest on my shoulders” is pretty much how it felt. Literally. For me, this song takes me inward and lets me release that pain.
Kick, Push II - Lupe Fiasco
ICONIC track, easily one of Lupe’s best. Such an anthem, tells the story so beautifully with a lot of sadness and yet complete victory. It highlights the importance of having a healthy outlet to process life, especially when life isn’t so easy. “Look at what we did, we came a long way from dirty ghetto kids” made me feel empowered because I was always told I’d be limited in my dreams because of being Libyan and a girl. I also experienced a bit of islamophobia at school and got called “dirty” by some kids when I went browner in the summertime. So this track for me, is a complete anthem. He discusses race in the track too, and how hard times fall on everyone, regardless of the color of your skin. The key is to “Kick, Push, and Coast”. I hung out with a lot of skater kids too so the song seemed apt.
Borders - MIA
M.I.A is one of the biggest badasses in music. She emerged from such hard times with such unapologetic music and is truly an inspiration for me, in her personality alone. Then she comes out with “Borders” with that serious video, unforgettable. She bluntly lists all the bullshit in our world, in a repetitive hook, followed by the question “what’s up with that?”. I heard this song soon after the Libyan Revolution too, where Libyan refugees were just drowning at sea and being rejected at borders because nobody seems to want to take Libyans in (apparently we’re all terrorists). What’s amazing about MIA is that she came to London as refugee, because her and her family discovered that her dad actually was a terrorist. So yeah, she’s a badass. M.I.A does not G.A.F. If I could hang out with one Artist for a day, it’s probably her.



