SHARAI’s ‘Get Back’: A Debut That Reclaims and Redefines


At just nineteen, SHARAI bursts onto the scene with a debut that is both intimate and expansive. From the gentle strum of her mother's guitar in a bedroom in South West London to the glamorous sheen of Abbey Road Studios, her debut release, Get Back, is the tale of resurrection. A track born in solitude, tempered in integrity, and perfected by ambition, it swings open to the sound of a young artist discovering her niche between folk's warmth, R&B's sensibility, and pop's inevitability.

With inspirations from Tracy Chapman's storytelling to Emeli Sandé's expansive emotion, SHARAI is an air of change that finds balance between earthiness and room for flight. Her BRIT School background and ICMP studies refine her art, but what her art does say transcends school -- it says experience and unashamed vulnerability. Already playing shows with the likes of Rachel Chinouriri and Sam Wilkinson, SHARAI demonstrated that she's one of those musicians who weaponize feeling and make it into electricity. 


Get Back is a repossession. It's a hymn to everyone who's ever felt disoriented and yearned to locate their stable core. The song does not give up its bedroom-journal intimacy, even as the walls of Abbey Road mythology expand its beat. It's not music that tells you a story -- it offers you the pen and invites you to write yourself in.

SHARAI’s voice arrives not as a whisper but as a declaration. A reminder that strength doesn’t always roar -- sometimes it sings, sometimes it aches, sometimes it finds its way back home. This is just the beginning of her, but with Get Back, SHARAI is introducing herself as an artist willing to offer listeners more than a song, but a mirror by which they can come to better know themselves. 



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