
Elle Friberg is a Botswana-born singer-songwriter based in Sweden, transforms life’s rhythms into soul-stirring melodies. With a voice that carries both vulnerability and strength, she weaves deeply personal experiences into songs that transcend the personal, offering a space for listeners to feel, heal, and celebrate their own journeys. Her music fuses raw emotion with infectious grooves, ensuring that both heart and body are part of the experience. Rooted in her own triumphs over adversity, Elle sees music as a vessel for liberation—one that invites us all to truly live, not just exist.
About Elle Friberg




From the moment she could hum a tune, Elle Friberg felt the pull of music—an unspoken language that allowed her to express what words could not. Her mother recalls her singing at just three years old, and by the time she joined the school choir at six, her love for melody had already taken root. At ten, she penned her first songs, though it wasn’t until life had etched its stories into her soul that her music deepened into something spiritual, emotional, and undeniably moving.
At sixteen, Elle took to the stage for the first time, lending her voice to church worship, first as a backing vocalist and then as a lead. A year later, she stood before thousands, not just singing, but telling stories through her own songs. That moment was the spark—proof that music wasn’t just something she did, but something she was.
At nineteen, the world expanded when she enrolled in drama school, but with growth came struggle. Culture shock, the weight of childhood wounds, and the turbulence of becoming an adult led to a battle with depression. Therapy, faith, and music became her lifelines, transforming pain into power. Instead of silencing her, adversity became her muse.
Now, Elle Friberg crafts music that gives voice to the unsaid—the ache of longing, the joy of release, the defiant hope that keeps us moving forward. Her songs are a refuge, a celebration, and an invitation to feel fully and freely. Through every note, she reminds us that music isn’t just sound—it’s liberation.

