0:00
Okay guys, in the new episode of Denim
0:02
and Leather podcast, uh we have a great
0:05
uh great violin player uh alter a little
0:08
bit alternative uh Emily V. Uh you're
0:12
coming from uh from the West Coast,
0:14
right? Yes. Los Angeles. Los Angeles. U
0:19
how are you first? I'm good. How are
0:21
you? It's morning there. So, uh, uh,
0:25
here is here is a little bit late going,
0:28
uh, you know, closer to to dark. It it's
0:31
morning, and I'll tell you what, I very
0:34
rarely get myself ready in the morning
0:38
this. I'm usually still drinking coffee,
0:41
but um, that's okay. I had my coffee.
0:44
Um, and where are you? I'm in uh
0:47
southern Europe. So, it's getting
0:49
getting uh very close to to dark now.
0:53
What part of Europe? I'm uh I'm in uh
0:56
you maybe you heard of the country
1:00
Yes. So, it's a it's uh neighboring to
1:03
Greece, very close to Italy. We're here.
1:06
Uh so, it's south it's uh southern
1:09
Europe. Uh southeastern probably. And uh
1:13
we have a lot of sun here just like you
1:17
Um first I wanted to ask you because uh
1:20
people in Europe are probably not that
1:22
familiar with Emily V. Uh not yet. Yeah.
1:26
Uh so uh when did you start with uh with
1:30
violin or with other instruments or with
1:32
music in general? Um so violin is my
1:36
first instrument. Um, and I started um,
1:40
I actually asked my parents for lessons
1:43
and my dad played when he was in grade
1:47
school and didn't really continue after
1:49
that. But when I was a young girl, my
1:52
uh, my parents showed me these violins
1:54
that my dad had played on when he was a
1:56
young boy. And I picked up the violin
1:58
and I just like instantly fell in love.
2:02
Um, I don't know. I don't know if I
2:04
played violin in another life, but I
2:06
just knew that I wanted to play. Um, I
2:08
begged my parents for lessons. My mom,
2:11
um, I come from a big family. I have
2:13
five brothers, and I think my mom was a
2:15
little bit hesitant to maybe pay for
2:17
lessons right away if she didn't know
2:18
that I was going to be kind of like into
2:20
it. And and I was. So, I I finally
2:24
started playing when I was about turning
2:27
I was 11. I was about to turn 12. Um,
2:30
and I'm classically trained, so I
2:32
started in classical music. Um, but I'm
2:36
raised on classic rock and I always knew
2:38
that I wanted to be an alternative
2:40
violinist and play like other styles.
2:43
Um, in fact, I always was trying to um,
2:48
kind of copy Jimmyi Hendris on the
2:50
violin with a W pedal and stuff. I was
2:51
like 15 and I was in my room. I had
2:54
soldered on a different kind of input on
2:56
my my I had an eighth inch and I cut it
2:58
off and soldered on a quarter inch and I
3:00
duct taped it on and I plugged in a W
3:02
pedal and I put it into an amp and I
3:05
would pretend like I was Jimmyi Hendris
3:06
on the violin but it sounded like [Â __Â ]
3:08
I mean it sounded horrible. Um but yeah,
3:12
so that was that was kind of um that was
3:15
how I got started. Um and then I went I
3:18
long story short, I ended up going to
3:19
school for music. Um I got a
3:22
scholarship. I moved down to LA. Um went
3:24
to Long Beach State as a violin
3:26
performance major. So I was still doing
3:28
a lot of classical, but in this time I
3:30
had taught myself guitar. Um I was I was
3:34
listening to, you know, I was raised
3:35
listening to Led Zeppelin and the
3:37
Rolling Stones and The Doors and Pink
3:39
Floyd and the Beatles and all that
3:42
stuff. And then my big brother turned me
3:44
on to like Allison Chains and Nirvana
3:48
um and like '90s hiphop and all all of
3:51
that world. Then I had another brother
3:53
that was really into like Iron Maiden
3:55
Metallica. Um, so I had a lot of
3:58
influences. Um, and then when I went to
4:01
school I was I was submersed in the
4:03
classical world, but then I was also
4:05
submersed in the jazz world. So I was
4:07
kind of diving into like Stefon Graelli,
4:09
Miles Davis, you know, John Col Train,
4:12
like all that kind of stuff. So I really
4:14
got my influence from every single style
4:17
of music there really is out there. Uh,
4:20
and I started I was a waitress in
4:24
college and I would go to the Irish pub
4:29
after I waitressed. I would go to
4:32
school, I would waitress, and then I
4:33
would go to the pub and I would meet
4:35
every single band that played there like
4:37
six nights a week and I would sit in
4:41
with every single band that would let
4:43
me. And that was actually really where I
4:45
cut my teeth as a performer, as an
4:48
improvisational violinist, as um getting
4:52
my rig together. You know, I've since I
4:55
have an I have several different amps I
4:57
play through. I have several different
4:58
pedal boards I've built. Um I've played
5:01
with many, many people. I've toured with
5:03
many people. I've recorded with many
5:04
people. I'm doing my own thing. And now
5:07
I am not your typical violinist. And I
5:09
love to rock out. Wow. It's uh it's a
5:14
great history of how you got to here.
5:15
But uh uh tell me uh you you know you
5:18
know uh what's interesting you're like
5:21
the third alternative violinist that
5:23
I've ever heard in my life. Uh the first
5:25
one was uh I'm a huge fan of Twisted
5:28
Sister of DN Snider and first time I
5:30
heard was Mark Wood. You know Mark Wood.
5:34
Yes. Mark Mark Wood played with D Snider
5:36
in a band. So yeah, I know him
5:39
personally. I've I've in fact he found
5:42
me at NM one year and he really wanted
5:45
me to play on his he's got a a line of
5:48
electric violins. Yeah. Wow. I didn't
5:51
know of that connection. Uh so uh do you
5:55
record albums with uh with a lot of
5:59
I have recorded with a lot of different
6:02
people. Um I've got a studio as you can
6:05
see. So, I I do record remotely for
6:08
people and I collaborate with people. Um
6:11
I'm and I'm currently trying to write
6:14
and record my own personal stuff. Is uh
6:18
your personal album or maybe? Yes. Yeah.
6:22
So, uh when I told when I told you that
6:24
I I've heard for three uh people that do
6:28
that, I I know Lindsay Sterling, but she
6:30
plays more like a pop music. Yeah, she's
6:34
she's incredible. Mark Wood, it's
6:36
incredible. All these violinists are
6:38
incredible. I would say that we're all
6:45
uh, yeah, I don't know. I think because
6:48
my influences have mostly come from
6:52
players. Um, and actually and even now
6:56
what I've been kind of diving into is
6:58
like is the influence of a vocalist and
7:01
what a vocalist can do because since my
7:04
violin I don't have frets on my violin I
7:07
can you know and all of these other
7:09
violinists would probably say the same
7:10
thing these other alternative violinist
7:11
is like you know I can create sounds and
7:14
tones that a lot of other guitarists and
7:17
other instruments cannot do but I can
7:19
kind of morph into the sound of a guitar
7:21
or a saxophone or a harmonica. a um or
7:24
or a beautiful acoustic violin, you
7:27
know. Yeah. So, do you do you always
7:29
have your your color of of the sound or
7:37
Um I would say my tone is pretty
7:40
consistent with like I think a lot of
7:42
people with the way I play and I think
7:45
with the my tone because I'm not a very
7:49
shrill bright violinist. My violin is a
7:52
little bit more dark and warm and girthy
7:55
and stuff because I like the I like to
7:58
almost like emulate the tone of like a
8:01
um I'm trying to think of some guitarist
8:04
that I really love. Um, of course it
8:07
escapes me when I'm on the spot. Um, but
8:10
that really like warm like you know tone
8:13
that really cuts through as opposed to
8:16
like sometimes for me violin especially
8:19
electric violin can be too real and
8:23
sparkly sounding. Yeah, maybe because
8:26
you mentioned Ellison Chains maybe maybe
8:28
Jerry Contrell he has that uh dark tone.
8:31
Maybe Allison Chains is one of my
8:34
all-time favorite bands. Yeah. And
8:37
they're darkest of all time. And they're
8:38
dark. And Lane Staley's vocals. I love
8:41
to do Lane Staley's vocals on my violin
8:43
because he's just so like he's just so
8:46
swimming through like all these weird
8:48
like notes and stuff. Yeah, he has that.
8:51
He has those harmonies. Uh maybe you
8:54
should try the the high ones like
8:56
Sebastian Bach or or or Rob Halford or
9:01
Yeah, actually I saw Jerry Kentrell not
9:04
that long ago. I saw him a handful of
9:06
months ago. His poster is in my
9:11
Yeah, I have one of my bathrooms in my
9:13
house is I'm collecting band posters
9:16
because I wanted it I wanted my bathroom
9:19
to feel like a green room bathroom when
9:21
you go in there and there's like all the
9:23
flyers and posters of different bands.
9:25
Yeah. So, I'm kind of creating that in
9:27
my bathroom right now. And I've got a
9:29
I've got a um uh what do you call it?
9:33
Um, the light that makes everything
9:35
glow. A black light. I have a black
9:37
light in there. My big brother gave me a
9:39
black light. So, I I put a lot of like
9:41
black light posters in there.
9:45
Uh, it's good for for inspiration for
9:48
your next uh music. Maybe Yeah. So, when
9:51
you're using the restroom, you can sit
9:56
How do How do you create music? you you
9:58
first write on your uh you play on your
10:00
violin or first you like write uh the
10:02
music down. How do you do that? Um so I
10:06
also play guitar. I play ba a little bit
10:09
of basic keys and I'm really into
10:12
writing lyrics. In fact, I'm like a I'm
10:15
a mad woman right now. I've written so
10:17
many lyrics. I'm just kind of I've got a
10:19
couple different people that I'm
10:20
co-writing with as well and kind of
10:22
waiting to see what forms into um what
10:26
the album is going to be. I I actually
10:29
to back up a little bit, I actually
10:30
wrote and recorded about half of an
10:33
album with uh John Avala back during the
10:36
pandemic. Um, and I sort of changed my
10:40
direction a little bit musically, so it
10:43
didn't quite make sense for me at the
10:44
time to put some of that stuff out, but
10:46
it was still very much in the same vein
10:48
of what I really love in the style of
10:51
music. Um, I think now, um, sorry, I'm
10:55
kind of deviated off your question. I'll
10:57
get back to that. But I think now I've
11:00
really been digging deep back into my
11:02
roots of like uh, blues rock. It's
11:06
interesting because uh like I play
11:08
violin. I think a lot of people expect
11:10
it to either be classical or country. Um
11:14
I'm just not country is not
11:18
my forte. I there's certain country that
11:22
I really love, especially like old old
11:24
classic country. Um, but the the style
11:28
of music that I really love, I think
11:31
because it comes from because I listen
11:32
to a lot of Led Zeppelin and that's a
11:34
lot of their influences were a lot of
11:36
the old blues guys and stuff like that.
11:38
So now I'm like kind of diving into this
11:43
riffbased with a, you know, four on the
11:46
floor kind of, you know, where they sing
11:48
with the riff on the guitar but doing it
11:50
on violin. Yeah. Yeah. kind of like how
11:53
Lark and Poe is, you know, I love Lark
11:55
and Poe. If you know Lark and Poe, the
11:56
sisters, they're they've got that that
11:59
kind of earthy, you know, grounded vibe.
12:03
Um, so when I write, um, it's always
12:07
different. Sometimes I get inspired to
12:09
write lyrics. Sometimes I get inspired.
12:12
I'll just get my headphones on here and
12:15
I'll throw on a drummer from like Logic
12:17
or something and I'll mess around on my
12:18
keys, you know, and then I'll throw a
12:20
violin on. It's actually the irony now
12:24
answering this question, the irony of
12:26
the whole thing is that I actually
12:28
almost never start a song on violin.
12:35
I I don't I can't think of a song that
12:37
I've ever started writing on violin. I
12:39
think I've always gone to a cordal
12:42
instrument first that with the actual
12:45
music and where I've had the lyrics
12:47
going. So that's that's interesting. I
12:49
never really thought about that until
12:51
just now. So it was a good question
12:56
I just had like a light bulb go on.
12:59
Uh did you tour with with some bands uh
13:03
back in the past or No, I mean um Yeah.
13:08
I mean, I've toured with I've toured and
13:11
performed and guest artists with a lot
13:13
of different people. Um, I was on the
13:15
road with the Addicts. They're a old old
13:18
punk punk band that have been around.
13:21
Um, I want to say back
13:26
200 16 or 18 or something like that.
13:29
Anyways, I I did a couple short runs
13:31
with them. That was really fun doing
13:33
like the punk violin theme.
13:37
Um, I've guested artist and played with
13:39
Lucas Nelson. I've played with Blind
13:42
Melon. Um, oh, do they still exist?
13:46
Yes. Blind Melon. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. In
13:49
fact, a good my my good friend is their
13:51
lead singer. So, I actually Oh, okay. We
13:54
we lived in the same town together for a
13:55
long time and that's how we kind of like
13:58
sort of stayed in touch. Um, I've played
14:01
with Robbie Kger, the guitarist of the
14:02
Doors. Yeah. um at the whiskey which was
14:06
very cool. I got to trade solos with
14:07
him. He was on guitar. I was on violin.
14:10
Um and then I've been with I've been
14:12
with a lot of other bands that have been
14:15
you know maybe not as internationally
14:17
known. Um but have done some amazing
14:21
things like that. I've gotten to open up
14:23
for some great people. Um I've played
14:25
Rock to Recovery at the Fonda Theater in
14:28
LA with all the sober musicians. I'm a
14:30
I'm a sober musician. Um, so I've got I
14:33
got to play with some celebrity
14:34
musicians there. Uh, so I mean I could
14:36
go on and on. Yeah, I' I've gotten to do
14:38
some pretty pretty fun and exciting
14:41
things. I I love it. I I mean uh I
14:43
didn't know about all of the history,
14:45
you know, of of your of your playing. Uh
14:48
how on how many records maybe do you
14:51
know how many CDs or vinyls your music
14:57
Um not off the top of my head, but it
15:03
in fact um one of the last like most
15:06
involved was I was in the Kevin Souza
15:08
band and for those of you that are in
15:10
Europe and stuff won't know. Um but
15:13
locally we were we were a fairly big
15:15
local band to where I live. Um and um
15:19
Kevin Souza was a good friend of mine.
15:21
He has since passed away. We're coming
15:22
up on two years. So when he died that
15:25
obviously was the end of that project.
15:27
But um we re we wrote and recorded an
15:30
album of during the pandemic. Um and
15:32
that album is on Spotify under Kevin Su
15:35
the Kevin Souza band. Um actually might
15:37
be under Kevin Souza. S O SA and all of
15:40
the strings on there are recorded by
15:42
myself. Um in fact we recorded all of
15:45
them in the bathroom at the studio that
15:47
we were at. Um my violin was recorded in
15:50
the bathroom there. Um but there's some
15:52
great things on there. It's a little
15:53
hard for me to listen to that album
15:55
because I was very close with Kevin and
15:56
and he was like a big brother to me, but
15:59
um the music's great and it's, you know,
16:01
there's some really ripping violin on
16:03
there, too. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
16:05
Yeah. So, I got to ask you because it's
16:07
Emily V. The V stands for violin, right?
16:11
No, the V is just it's just Emily V.
16:14
Okay. So, it stands for like like an
16:16
artistic name, right? It's just my my
16:18
stage name, Emily V. It's just that when
16:21
I went to go change it from from
16:23
Facebook on, you know, I'm on the
16:26
personal Facebook, my artist Facebook,
16:28
and my artist Instagram. And for a long
16:31
time, I didn't use my my personal
16:34
Facebook page for much until maybe this
16:37
last year, I thought, well, I've got a
16:39
lot of people that don't follow me on
16:40
these other places. So, I started just
16:43
kind of sharing what I was sharing on
16:44
all all my other platforms there. Um,
16:47
and I try to change my name and Facebook
16:50
won't let it just be one letter. Um, so
16:54
it's Emily Violin and a lot of people
16:55
think my name is Emily Violin. It's not.
16:57
It's just that that's what my Facebook
16:59
says, but it sounds good. It sounds
17:04
Yeah. Yeah. Uh, what are your what are
17:07
your next uh maybe plans on doing
17:11
something shortterm or long term?
17:15
Um, well, currently I'm I'm playing with
17:19
many different projects. Keeps me very
17:21
very busy. As you know, we had to
17:23
reschedule this about a billion times.
17:26
Um, and so right now I'm just
17:31
um kind of co-writing with a couple of
17:34
the different projects that I'm in right
17:36
now to kind of see sort of, you know, I
17:40
think as an artist, it's just kind of
17:42
finding, you know, who can commit and
17:45
kind of put their all into a project.
17:47
And for me, that's the most important.
17:49
Um, and so, you know, I think by this
17:52
next year, um, by the end of this year,
17:54
there'll be some more recordings out of
17:57
more more of my original stuff. Um, I'm
18:00
in talks with a studio in Nashville and
18:03
some different things as well. Um, so
18:05
that's the that's the kind of short and
18:08
longterm goals because those are both,
18:10
right? Um, and I've got a lot of my my
18:14
calendar is very full with um traveling
18:18
and flight dates and stuff with um
18:21
another project that wants me to go on
18:23
tour with them by the end of this year.
18:25
Um, and a an Irish rock band that I'm
18:28
already a part of right now and we've
18:31
got a bunch of dates through the end of
18:33
this year. Um, and then a project that
18:35
I've started with my now singer, his
18:37
name's Danny Bicil. we're writing and
18:40
recording together. Um, and then I've
18:42
got another new guitarist that's come
18:44
in, wants to do a project, and then in
18:46
between I'm writing all my own original
18:48
stuff. So, I don't know if that answers,
18:51
but definitely a lot of things are
18:52
happening right now. I would say if you
18:54
want to see what's happening, I would
18:55
definitely follow my Instagram and my
18:58
Facebook cuz I'm I'm very active on
19:00
social media, too. Yeah, I will we will
19:02
put all the links down there uh so
19:04
people can can find out. But uh I always
19:07
say I always see on your socials on
19:09
Facebook I followed you. Uh I always see
19:12
a packed packed clubs where you play. I
19:15
mean it's uh sold out shows, right? Oh
19:20
yeah. Um so cuz I started doing a solo
19:23
show a couple years ago and I played in
19:28
Um, I'm trying to think when that I
19:31
think it was in February and it was uh
19:34
it was just me fronting my own project
19:37
and I had my very very good friend Steve
19:39
Agular who I lovingly call Shag. He's a
19:42
keyboard player. He doesn't just he
19:44
plays keys and keys bass and he's an
19:48
incredible MD and an incredible person.
19:51
He's one of my best friends. He he was
19:54
my partner on that project um at least
19:57
during that show because I've also done
19:58
that show with um Jonathan Mover who's a
20:00
very well-known drummer for Joe
20:02
Bonamasa. Um he performs with me as
20:05
well. Um that's another project that I'm
20:08
supposed to be um possibly joining and
20:12
touring with a little bit this year and
20:14
into next year with uh with Jonathan
20:17
Mover. If any if any of you guys are
20:19
fans of him, then you know how
20:20
incredible he is. Awesome. Awesome. Um,
20:22
but when I went to go do this solo show
20:24
in Arizona, um, completely sold out both
20:28
nights to the brim. So, a lot of things
20:31
that I'm doing right now, I think a lot
20:32
of people are very excited about. And
20:34
for the most part, like everything's
20:36
mostly selling out. So, I'm very
20:38
blessed. I'm very lucky. I'm very
20:40
thankful for people that are following
20:42
my journey. Well, uh, I can I can see
20:45
you're very busy and you already in the
20:48
studio, so maybe you you'll work on some
20:50
music. Uh so I I got to thank you for
20:52
this interview. Uh thank you for
20:54
accepting the offer uh of this interview
20:56
and uh it was a long wait but we did it.
21:00
Yes. Yes. And thank you for having me. I
21:02
really appreciate it. Of course. Thank
21:04
you. Thank you, Emily.