
Sometimes the most meaningful stories start in the simplest places: a room, a bass line, and a voice daring to improvise. That’s how “Deep End”, the debut single from Sabrina Nejmah, was born. At just 17 years old, the Hamburg-based singer-songwriter is stepping into the spotlight with a sound that feels both fresh and unexpectedly mature.
Raised in a multicultural household —her mother is Moroccan and her father, Norman Astor, is a jazz bassist— Sabrina grew up surrounded by music and cultural contrasts that shaped her artistic sensibility. What began as playful sessions with her father soon turned into the foundation of her first professional release. “It all came from a spontaneous moment, almost as if the song was just waiting to be found,” she has shared in early conversations.
What stands out about Sabrina isn’t only her age, but the emotional depth in her delivery. Her voice carries warmth, fragility, and strength all at once, drawing subtle comparisons to Amy Winehouse or Norah Jones, while resonating with the modern sensitivity of artists like Billie Eilish.
Produced in Hamburg by Markus Norwin Rummel, “Deep End” captures an intimate atmosphere —it sounds less like a studio experiment and more like an entry from a personal diary. There are no flashy tricks, just sincerity wrapped in melody.
With this first release, Sabrina Nejmah isn’t just introducing herself to the world; she’s making a statement that vulnerability can be powerful. “Deep End” is only the beginning, but it already shows that her voice belongs in the evolving landscape of contemporary music.
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