Public Figures

Tania Saleh

Tania Saleh is a Lebanese singer/songwriter who has been paving her own path in the Arabic underground musical scene since 1990.

Her voice is wise and true, a soft mix between the traditional Arabic music she was raised on and the western sounds she chose to follow. She writes about the daily worries of a troubled society, of love and hate and what’s in between. Her music follows the rhythm of her daily life and mirrors her changing mood, creating a boiling pot of tunes, feelings and love for innovation.

Tania graduated from La Sorbonne, Paris in 1992 and has been working in the creative audio-visual industry since then. In 2002, she released her first album, “Tania Saleh” with Lebanese music veteran Issam Hajj Ali and music producer/sound engineer Philippe Tohme. In the meantime, she wrote the lyrics to “Mreyte Ya Mreyte”, the title song in Nadine Labaki’s first feature film “Caramel”, composed by Khaled Mouzannar.

In 2009, she shot the music video “Ya Wled”, a critical ode to all Lebanese politicians prior to the parliamentary elections. She also released the single “Slow Down” to commemorate her first trip to the U.S.A., hosted by music producer Miles Copeland who chose her as one of the main Arab artists portrayed in the PBS-produced musical documentary entitled “Dissonance and Harmony/Arab Music Goes West”. The documentary was preceded by a 5-day musical workshop uniting American and Arab artists at SIR studios in Los Angeles. The musical documentary was directed by Jon Brandeis and aired on PBS, BBC and Al Jazeera.

In April 2011, she released her second studio album entitled “Wehde” co-produced by Philippe Tohme. She also wrote the lyrics to Khaled Mouzannar’s soundtrack for Nadine Labaki’s second feature film “Where Do We Go Now” released worldwide in September 2011.