AI-Generated Singer Becomes Viral Voice for Iranians With New Anthem
A digital performer created by a UK-based Iranian artist has captured millions of listeners with a song drawing on historic poetry and modern technology.
A powerful new anthem performed by an artificial intelligence-generated singer has resonated widely among Iranians, highlighting how digital creativity is reshaping cultural expression in a period of political and social tension.
The song, titled “Javanan-e Vatane” – meaning “Youth of the Homeland” – is performed by a virtual singer named Nava, a fictional character created using artificial intelligence by Farbod Mehr, a London-based artist who was born in Iran.
The track combines historic Persian poetry with contemporary musical production, producing an emotional message centred on hope, sacrifice and national renewal.
Although the singer’s voice appears human, Nava exists entirely as a digital creation.
Mehr developed the character as a young woman whose music symbolically represents Iranian women who are prohibited from singing publicly as solo performers in their own country.
By using artificial intelligence, he said he sought to give voice to people who face restrictions on artistic expression.
The song draws on lyrics by the early twentieth-century poet Aref Qazvini, a figure associated with patriotic and anti-authoritarian themes in Iranian cultural history.
Set against a modern musical arrangement influenced by European folk melodies, the track blends traditional language with a contemporary sound designed to reach younger audiences.
Despite internet restrictions and the challenges of online access inside Iran, the song has spread rapidly across social media.
Videos featuring the AI singer have accumulated millions of views and shares, with listeners both inside Iran and across the global Iranian diaspora circulating the track as a symbol of cultural solidarity.
The phenomenon also reflects a broader technological shift in music creation.
Artificial intelligence is increasingly being used to generate realistic singing voices, digital characters and immersive performances that can exist entirely online or appear as holograms in live shows.
Mehr has suggested that Nava could eventually appear in concerts as a holographic performer and continue releasing music online, expanding the role of virtual artists in global pop culture.
For many listeners, the project demonstrates how technology can open new avenues for artistic expression even in environments where creative voices face significant limitations.
As the song continues to circulate online, the AI singer has become an unexpected cultural figure – not a human performer, but a digital voice reflecting the emotions, aspirations and debates of a society navigating rapid change.