Guitar World

Emily Wolfe

THIS POP-LOVING AUSTIN ROCKER FORTIFIES HER EARWORM MELODIES WITH CHUNKY, MID-RANGE TONES — COURTESY OF HER SIGNATURE EPIPHONE

- By Mark McStea

EMILY WOLFE’S SOPHOMORE album, Outlier, takes her bluesy rock stylings and adds a sheen of pop gloss to the recipe, thanks to producer Michael Schuman’s ear for commercial­ity. That shouldn’t come as a surprise; Wolfe has been vocal about her equal appreciati­on of Ariana Grande and Stevie Ray Vaughan. “To me, pop is so important and so relevant. When you listen to modern pop, those songs are immediatel­y stuck in your head. To me, that’s the point of art, to stick. I would defend pop music to my grave.”

Wolfe started playing at age five but had a couple of false starts before she found her groove. “It didn’t come easily at first — it definitely took a minute. I started to try to teach myself, and then I had a lesson with somebody who told me I wasn’t any good, which deterred me a little, but when we moved from North Carolina to Texas, I definitely latched onto the guitar as a way of coping with being in a new place as a teenager. It evolved from there.”

Wolfe’s guitar sound is a rich, mid-heavy crunch that has elements of Billy Gibbons’ sonic signature. “He’s a big influence. I tried to emulate his tone a lot — super midrangey and chunky. I love midrange stuff, especially with my Epiphone Sheraton, which has such a fat sound and sits really well in the mix.” The Sheraton she’s referring to is actually her signature model. “I play that model now; it’s identical to the ones in stores. The first prototype had super-hot pickups that didn’t work with the body, but we changed to low output pickups. It just really sings.”

Wolfe’s pedal board is packed with effects to help achieve that thick, chewy tone. “Yeah, but there are three key pedals that I gravitate toward: EarthQuake­r Device’s Tentacle, which is an octave-up pedal; a Fulltone OCD; and an MXR six band EQ. Before that, in my chain I use an Origin Effects Cali 76, which is a fantastic compressor; it’s so transparen­t, but it seems to make me play better. Live, I use a Fender Deville 410 because it’s super reliable. In the studio, I use a variety of amps from Silvertone­s to old tweed Fenders and a Concert Reverb 4x10, which is the most amazing-sounding

“The point for me is for the song to be something that will resonate with people on a level they didn’t realize that they could feel”

amp I own, but if I move it out of its place physically, I’m afraid it’ll fall apart.”

Wolfe is unabashed about her desire to score hit singles. “I feel like that is the goal, but I also want to make sure the songs I write come from a place of honesty, not just anything to get a hit. The point for me is for the song to be something that will resonate with people on a level they didn’t realize that they could feel; the priority for me is realness in everything I do.”

 ?? ?? “I would defend pop music to my grave,” Emily Wolfe says
“I would defend pop music to my grave,” Emily Wolfe says

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