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Meet Young Sabre, the 17 year old luxury R&B pioneer.

Updated: Dec 20, 2024



Aramis Surtees known professionally as Young Sabre, is an Australian singer-songwriter. Not to be overlooked as another "underground" artist, Young Sabre is a rare visionary with the ambition of a young Pharrell Williams.


In Australia, Sabre grew up with an older brother Mason, the two stuck together from the jump to be known globally... but not in the spotlight. Sabre speaks about always keeping his 'circle' tight and not telling people what they don't need to know. This translates into his music, in an exclusive catch up with the kid, he tells us exactly why he founded his collective "4381". From a background of broken relationships Sabre's character is built from a history of trauma and life lessons, his front shows different though, no one in school or outside, apart from his circle know the in's and out's of what he keeps private, this is evident in his upcoming releases.


"There was more than enough reasons for me to create what I want, with the people I want. I can't have nobody dilute my message to the world."

With issues stemming from management turning sour, broken ties, and character development, Young Sabre decided to split ways with the traditional route of almost every artist and build a foundation that's built to last... from the beginning. No royalty splits to be made apart from whoever added sound to every record, just love for music, each other and business.


It's hard to expect a lot from a 17 year old, but the limited discography resembles much more than a photo and a piece of audio. It resembles quality and the knowing of keeping only what's meaningful. Young Sabre feels "too many people are distributing music for trends, resulting in excessive amounts of money, which is positive to the beneficial owner but to the artists and fans it takes away from the personal touch that is supposed to connect with each audience."


"Artists are supposed to be nurtured, not neglected. Who else has a bigger impact on society than the person who has the world reciting what they wrote 24/7?"

Sabre plans to touch a little on political and societal issues of his own experiences, "Who else has a bigger impact on society than the person who has the world reciting what they wrote 24/7?". This is exactly why founding his own record label with the only real people he knows guarantees that his message, and only his message can be delivered to his audience without infiltration. The gift of giving music can be used for good and evil, while Aramis might not always sing about the prettiest things, it might just be the realest.


Working on projects globally, the collective travels country to country making business connections and collaborating with other creatives. While his hometown isn't his target audience, the attention still lingers.

Sabre's goal at the moment isn't the monthly listeners or numbers upfront but rather everything behind the scenes, the rest can be saved for later.


4381 Worldwide,


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