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* Released: 31 August 2018
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* Label: [[#l1442133|RWG Records]]
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* Released: 17 May 2012
* Released: 17 May 2012
* Label: Independent
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Revision as of 10:02, 12 January 2020

Emma Blackery
Blackery, looking at the camera
Blackery in April 2018
Background information
Birth nameEmma Louise Blackery
Born (1991-11-11) 11 November 1991 (age 33)
Basildon, Essex, England
OriginBrighton
Genres
  • Pop
  • rock
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • author
  • YouTuber
  • record producer
Instruments
Years active2012 (2012)–present
LabelsRWG Records
YouTube information
Channel
Genres
  • Music
  • comedy
  • health
Subscribers1.24 million Edit this at Wikidata[1]
(June 2024)
100,000 subscribers2013
1,000,000 subscribers2015

Emma Louise Blackery (born 11 November 1991) is an English singer-songwriter, YouTube vlogger, record producer, and author.[2][3][4] Active since 2012, Blackery has released EPs, singles, and Vevo music videos. She has toured with Busted, and headlined tours for her first LP record: Villains (2018), released on her RWG Records label.

In 2015, Blackery's main YouTube channel had over one million subscribers.[5][6] She performed and was a panelist at YouTube events (including Summer in the City and VidCon),[7] and has contributed twice to the YouTube Rewind video series. Blackery's book, Feel Good 101: The Outsiders' Guide to a Happier Life, is based on her 2013 Feel Good 101 video series.

Career

Blackery was born in Basildon, and worked as a waitress before beginning her career as musician and YouTuber.[8][9]

In 2018, she founded her independent record label (RWG Records),[10] and experimented with paid promotion in "Cute Without You" (which was published under a CC-BY licence)[11] and explored influencer marketing on her blog.[12]

Music

Blackery onstage, singing
At the Manchester Arena, 2016

She released her first EP, Human Behaviour, in early 2012.[13] Blackery released her second EP, Distance, in July 2013. A music video for the lead track, "Go the Distance," was produced by Arthur Walwin.[14][15] Her third EP, Perfect, was released on 11 November 2014 (Blackery's 23rd birthday).[16] Its title track topped the UK Independent Singles Breakers Chart for one week, and entered the UK Rock & Metal Singles Chart at number eight.[17] In 2015, Elle included Blackery on its "30 Women Under 30 Who Are Changing the World" list.[18]

Jason Perry produced Blackery's fourth EP, Sucks to Be You, which was released in 2016.[19][20] Its title track peaked at number 85 on the Scottish Singles Chart.[21] On 4 April 2016, Blackery announced that she would join pop punk band Busted on their Pigs Can Fly tour.[22] "Sucks to Be You" was the runner-up for the first Summer in the City Song of the Year award.[23] After touring with Busted, Blackery toured on her own and performed her music at other YouTube events.[24]

She released her fifth EP, Magnetised, on 26 May 2017.[25][26] It charted at number 63 on the Official Album Chart,[17] and peaked at number five on the UK Independent Album Chart and number two on the Official Independent Album Breakers Chart.[27][28] On 6 August, Blackery received a Summer in the City Song of the Year award for "Nothing Without You".[29] The cover art for Magnetised was featured at the Apple Keynote event for the iPhone X in September 2017.[30][4][17]

Blackery founded her independent record label, RWG Records, in 2018.[10][31] On 16 March 2018, she released "Dirt", produced by Toby Scott, in FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) format.[31][32] The song, on Spotify's New Music Friday UK playlist,[33][34] was described by Record of the Day as a "slick combination of Scandi-pop" and "sassy American pop";[31] Blackery described "Dirt" as "best served cold".[35] She also released "Agenda" that month with a lyric video on Vevo,[36] followed by"Icarus" and "Take Me Out".[32][37][38][39]

Blackery, with a tattooed arm, holding a guitar
In Brighton, 2018

Blackery released her first LP record, Villains, on 31 August 2018.[40][8] The album contains songs written in collaboration with Toby Scott, Maxwell Cooke, and Peter Hutchings.[41][42] BroadwayWorld noted that "Petty" "flirts with tropical house",[32] and the Express & Star cited elements of power pop.[43] Lisa Hafey, praising "Third Eye"'s "upbeat disco sound" and "nice ABBA-y vibe", called Villains "a bit of a feminist album".[40] In June Blackery performed "Third Eye" live at the 9th VidCon Night of Awesome.[44] Blackery then partnered with HMV for a UK tour. Villains reached number 24 on the Official UK Charts[45] and number 18 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart.[46][47]

The European Villains Tour, planned for March 2018, was postponed until October.[48][49][50] London based singer-songwriter Lilly Ahlberg was the tour's special guest.[51] The three-week tour began at Oslo's Parkteatret on 4 October, followed by performances in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Sugarfactory (Amsterdam), Hamburg, Berlin, Vienna, Munich, Cologne, Frankfurt, Academy 2 (Manchester), O2 Institute2 (Birmingham), The Garage (Glasgow), and Tramshed (Cardiff) before ending at KOKO in London on 25 October.[52][53] A Never Enough Notes reviewer at KOKO saw "angst, passion, and energy in every word" and wrote that Blackery has "a knack for live shows; full of attitude, high energy and a phenomenal vocal performance".[54]

Blackery released "Cute Without You", produced with Toby Scott, in April 2019.[47][55] In July 2019 she performed at the Evoke festival in Brentwood and for BBC Radio 5 Live, where Nihal Arthanayake interviewed her for his Headliners series.[56][57] In December she performed "Plot Holes" for the first SitC Winter Edition at NEC.[58]

YouTube

Blackey wearing a shirt with the word "Sorry" on it
In Brighton, 2018

She was initially inspired by Shane Dawson, Smosh, Dan Howell,[6] Phil Lester and, in 2017, by Troye Sivan.[8] In 2018, Blackery had three active YouTube channels; other channels have been deleted,[6] re-branded,[59] or left inactive.[60]

  • Emma Blackery – Blackery's main channel, created in May 2012, on which she hosts vlogs, music videos, comedy sketches, and other content.[5] Although she began to develop a following by reading excerpts from Fifty Shades of Grey on her channel, the videos were removed due to copyright complaints.[59] In 2018, the channel had nearly 1.5 million subscribers.[9]
  • EmmaBlackeryVEVO – created to upload her Vevo music videos, including "Nothing Without You", "Magnetised", "Don't Come Home" (lyric video), "Dirt" (acoustic version), "Agenda" (lyric video), "Icarus" (lyric video), and Take Me Out.[61]
  • Vloggery – dedicated to vlogs, including her IPOAD series of longer videos and other content not on her main channel.[26] Blackery presented Summer in the City 2017 in three videos. EmmaBlackeryVEVO, Vloggery, and the Topic channel have been closed to subscription since May 2019, and all videos are on the main channel.[62][63]
A smiling Blackery giving two thumbs up
Blackery in 2018

In 2013, Blackery participated in YouTube's Geek Week,[64][65], and began an extensive series of collaborations with Nerd³. Grace Helbig featured her in a Not Too Deep podcast the following year.[66] Blackery received a Gold YouTube Play Button for having over one million subscribers in 2015,[6] and joined PewDiePie's now-defunct Revelmode network,[67] won on Tom Scott's Game On show, was spotlighted by YouTube as one of 18 #MadeForYou UK YouTubers,[68] and appeared in the Red Bull TV documentary Kings of Content with Louis Cole the following year.[69] She expressed her unhappiness with YouTube Rewind after two appearances,[70] and The Guardian cited Blackery as one of three case studies of pressure and YouTube burnout in 2018.[71]

Some of her most-viewed videos are "If Tampon Commercials Were Honest",[72] "The Sims in Real Life",[73] and "If Websites Started Dating".[74] Blackery's "My thoughts on Google+" video went viral in 2013,[6][75] after Tubefilter featured it as the best reaction to a new YouTube comment system.[76] Blackery sang it again in November 2018 to celebrate the end of Google+.[77] In December 2016, TenEighty included her "YouTube Heros (Parody)" as one of their "Five of the Best: Parody Videos".[78]

Book

Blackery wrote Feel Good 101: The Outsiders' Guide to a Happier Life (based on her 2013 Feel Good 101  video series),[6] addressing depression, self-harm, anxiety and other issues.[79] The book was published in September 2017.[80][81][82]

Personal life

Three yellow triangles forming a larger one
Triforce, symbol of The Legend of Zelda video-game series

Blackery grew up in Basildon, Essex, finished sixth form at Bromfords School,[83] and lives in Brighton.[9] Her stepsister was born in 2007.[6] In 2015, Blackery disclosed that she had been diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome[84] and supported Liberty in North Korea.[85] She is a Zelda and WWE fan.[66][86] TenEighty interviewed Blackery and noted that she admits "her flaws and lays her damages out for everyone to see".[6]

Her music is influenced and inspired by blink-182, Green Day, Tessa Violet, The White Stripes, My Chemical Romance, Paramore, Avril Lavigne, Placebo, Nine Inch Nails, Twenty One Pilots,[87][88] and Taylor Swift.[86] On #WomanCrushWednesday 2017, The Daily Dot quoted YouTube's Culture and Trends team lead Earnest Pettie as calling Blackery "a thoughtful, funny, ferocious feminist unafraid of having an opinion".[26]

Discography

Albums

Title Peak chart
position
Release details
UK
[45]
Villains 24

EPs

Title Peak chart
position
Release details
UK
[45]
Human Behaviour
  • Released: 17 May 2012
  • Label: Independent
  • Formats: Digital, EP[87]
Distance
  • Released: 16 July 2013
  • Label: Independent
  • Formats: Digital, EP
Perfect
  • Released: 11 November 2014
  • Label: Fireflight[89]
  • Formats: Digital, EP
Sucks to Be You
  • Released: 27 May 2016
  • Label: Independent
  • Formats: Digital, EP
Magnetised 63
  • Released: 26 May 2017
  • Label: Emma Blackery Ltd.[90]
  • Formats: Digital, CD, EP, Vinyl

Singles

Title Year Peak chart positions Album
UK Sales
[91]
SCO
[21]
"Go the Distance" 2013 Distance
"The Promise"
"My Thoughts on Google+" Non-album single
"Perfect" 2014 Perfect
"Next to You"
(feat. Arthur Walwin)
"I've Been Worse" 2015 Non-album singles
"Your Own Shoes"
"Sucks to Be You" 2016 85 Sucks to Be You
"Nothing Without You" 2017 Magnetised
"Magnetised"[92]
"Don't Come Home"
"Dirt"[31] 2018 47 Villains
"Dirt (acoustic)"[93] Non-album single
"Agenda" Villains
"Icarus"
"Take Me Out"
"Cute Without You"[47] 2019 Non-album single

Bibliography

  • Feel Good 101: The Outsiders' Guide to a Happier Life (Sphere, 2017, ISBN 978-0751569230)

See also

References

  1. ^ "About emmablackery". YouTube.
  2. ^ Emma Blackery [@emmablackery] (4 March 2014). "My middle name is Louise. LOUISE. LIKE EVERY OTHER EMMA ON THIS PLANET" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 26 August 2015 – via Twitter.
  3. ^ Emma Blackery (2012). "Emma Blackery FAQ". emmablackery.com. Archived from the original on 1 July 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Will singer Emma Blackery benefit from the iPhone X factor? ". The Guardian. 13 September 2017. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. She's adorable.
  5. ^ a b Emma Blackery's channel on YouTube.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Teoh Lander-Boyce (29 August 2015). "Emma Blackery: The Jekyll and Hyde Within". TenEightyMagazine.com. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019.
  7. ^ Summer in the City (8 August 2014). Becoming YouTube Panel – #SitC2013 on YouTube.
  8. ^ a b c Chris Stokel-Walker (10 August 2018). "How Emma Blackery went from YouTube fame to IRL music career". Music. Wired UK. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019.
  9. ^ a b c Tommy Wathen (29 August 2018). "Meet the YouTuber from Basildon with nearly 1.5 million subscribers and an upcoming music tour". EssexLive.news. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019.
  10. ^ a b "RWG Records Limited". Companies House. 14 February 2018. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019.
  11. ^ Emma Blackery (14 April 2018). Cute Without You on YouTube, also available on WikiMedia.
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  87. ^ Emma Blackery (25 March 2016). 10 Albums That Changed My Life! on YouTube.
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  92. ^ "Dirt (acoustic) – Single". iTunes Store. 27 April 2018. Archived from the original on 7 January 2019.