Amira Jazeera Unveils Debut Album ‘The Amira Diaries’—A Bold Fusion of Pop, R&B & Arabic Sounds


Amira Jazeera’s debut The Amira Diaries bursts from her bedroom studio as a fearless fusion of 80s synth-pop, early-2000s R&B, glam rock, and Arabic soundscapes. Over ten tracks, the queer Palestinian-American artist navigates heartbreak, healing, and cultural grief with a voice that can soothe like SZA, soar like Erykah Badu, and ignite like Dua Lipa.
Opener “Solitude” sets a moody, introspective tone before the sun-drenched bounce of “Perfect 4 Me” washes in with retro keys and laid-back swagger. “Deadline” and “Still Thinkin’ Bout Me” layer slick grooves under confessional lyrics, while the interlude “Believe In Love Again” leads into the defiant anthem “Werk It,” where Amira’s sultry vocals reclaim strength after pain. Closing with the bittersweet “Teardrops,” the album feels like a diary you can dance to—each song a snapshot of survival, self-love, and collective resilience.
Named for both her own title (“Princess” in Arabic) and the storybook metamorphosis of The Princess Diaries, this record is Amira’s bold assertion of her narrative. Streaming now via Levantine Music, The Amira Diaries is pop empowerment with an edge—proof that the most personal stories can become the most universal anthems.