Remah Rhel

Remah Rhel Highlight Reel

Remah Rhel is one of pop music’s most promising new voices—a rising star with a story as compelling as her sound.

Born and raised in a small Midwestern town, Remah grew up in a family that valued hard work and resilience. Her father worked construction, and her mother balanced two jobs while raising three kids. Music became Remah’s escape early on; she remembers sitting on the floor of her bedroom with a cheap keyboard and writing her first songs by the time she was ten.

At sixteen, her life took a dramatic turn when she lost her older brother in a car accident—an event that pushed her deeper into music as a form of healing and expression. She began performing at coffee shops, open mics, and eventually local festivals, honing her voice and her storytelling ability.

By nineteen, she had packed her bags and moved to Nashville with little more than a notebook full of lyrics and the determination to make something of herself. She worked part-time jobs to pay the bills, sleeping on friends’ couches while recording demos at night. Those demos caught the attention of producers who saw her blend of raw honesty and polished pop sensibilities as something rare.

Now in her early twenties, with her striking blond hair, piercing blue eyes, and undeniable stage presence, Remah is steadily carving her path. Her sound pulls from influences like Billie Eilish, Tate McRae, Halsey, and early Taylor Swift, blending vulnerability with sharp hooks and modern production. Listeners often describe her voice as “angelic but grounded”—a tone that feels both intimate and universal.

What sets Remah apart is her relatability. She’s not afraid to write about heartbreak, loss, ambition, and the messy process of growing up. Her songs resonate because they come from a real place, shaped by a journey that hasn’t always been easy.

With her debut EP on the horizon, Remah Rhel is poised to capture the hearts of audiences far beyond the Midwest roots she came from.

Interview with Remah Rhel

Q: Remah, when did you first realize music was going to be your path?
Remah: Honestly, I think I always knew. I was that kid who would lock herself in her room and sing into a hairbrush for hours. But when my brother passed away, that’s when music stopped being just a hobby—it became survival. Writing songs was the only way I knew how to process it.

Q: What’s been the hardest part about chasing this dream?
Remah: The uncertainty. There were nights I was sleeping on floors, wondering if I’d made the biggest mistake leaving home. I missed birthdays, holidays—normal stuff. But I kept reminding myself that everything worth having costs something.

Q: Who inspires you musically?
Remah: I love Billie’s fearlessness, Tate McRae’s honesty, Halsey’s edge, and Taylor’s storytelling. Those women paved a lane for artists like me to be raw and real.

Q: If someone’s never heard your music, how would you describe it?
Remah: It’s pop with heart. It’s catchy enough to get stuck in your head, but I want you to feel something in your chest too. I write like I’m talking to a friend at 2 a.m.—honest, maybe a little messy, but real.

Q: What do you hope people take away from your songs?
Remah: That they’re not alone. Whether it’s heartbreak, loss, or just trying to figure yourself out—I want people to hear my music and think, “She gets it. She gets me.”

Q: Where do you see yourself in five years?
Remah: On stage, singing my heart out to a crowd that knows every word. I want to build a career that lasts, not just a moment. If I can do that while staying true to myself, that’s the dream.

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