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Emily Saliers

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Genres
  
Role
  
Singer-songwriter

Years active
  
1985–present

Spouse
  
Tristin Chipman (m. 2013)

Labels
  
IG Records

Name
  
Emily Saliers


Emily Saliers wwwglaadorgwpcontentuploads200904emilysali

Born
  
July 22, 1963 (age 60) New Haven, Connecticut (
1963-07-22
)

Origin
  
Connecticut, United States

Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter, restaurateur

Instruments
  
Vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, mandolin, ukulele, banjo, bouzouki

Books
  
A Song to Sing, A Life to Live

Movies
  
Indigo Girls: Live at the Fill, Denver

Similar People
  
Amy Ray, Don Saliers, Vonda Shepard, John Reynolds, John Keane

Music group
  
Indigo Girls (Since 1985)

Emily saliers of the indigo girls performs with songs for kids foundation at children s hospital


Emily Saliers (born July 22, 1963) is an American singer-songwriter and member of the musical duo Indigo Girls. Saliers plays lead guitar as well as banjo, piano, mandolin, ukulele, bouzouki and many other instruments.

Contents

Emily Saliers Emily Saliers Keeping faith and the good fight Street Roots

Emily saliers of the indigo girls sings run 30a songwriters festival


Early life and education

Emily Saliers Whosoever Magazine

Saliers was born in New Haven, Connecticut as the second eldest of four daughters — to Don and Jane Saliers (née Firmin; a librarian). Since approximately age 11, she was raised in Decatur, Georgia (in metro Atlanta). Don Saliers was the William R. Cannon Distinguished Professor of Theology and Worship at the Candler School of Theology at Emory University; he is currently Theologian-in-Residence and a professor emeritus. In addition to teaching theology and worship, he directed the master of sacred music program there.

Emily Saliers An Interview with the Indigo Girls39 Emily Saliers

Emily attended Laurel Ridge Elementary School in Decatur, Georgia. She later attended Shamrock High School, which she did not like. She began her college education at Tulane University but transferred to Emory University, graduating in 1985 with a bachelor's degree in English.

Indigo Girls

Emily Saliers Indigo moods

Saliers first met her future Indigo Girls counterpart Amy Ray when they were students at Laurel Ridge Elementary School in Decatur, Georgia. As students at Shamrock High School, they started performing music together at talent shows and local venues (including bars when she was still under age) under the band names of "Saliers & Ray" and the "B-Band". When Saliers (the elder of the duo) left Georgia for college in Louisiana, Ray frequently visited her. They would play together for tips in New Orleans' French Quarter. Saliers and Ray eventually reunited when they transferred from their respective colleges to Emory University. At Emory they settled upon the band name Indigo Girls; Ray came across the word indigo in the dictionary and "thought it sounded cool".

Performing as Emily Saliers

In 2004, Saliers composed her first film score for the independent short film, One Weekend a Month. She occasionally performs solo at benefit shows or as a guest with friends' bands. She and her father Don Saliers performed together once at the Washington National Cathedral in 2007.

In 2014, she began working on her first solo album, Murmuration Nation, which was released on August 11, 2017 and was produced by longtime friend and Juilliard-trained violin player for Indigo Girls, Lyris Hung. The album was recorded in New York City and engineered by Ryan Kelly and Tom Morello. Appearing with Saliers are drummers Robert "Sput" Searight and Will Calhoun, bassist Tim Lefebvre, and keyboardist Rachel Eckroth, along with guest vocalists Jonatha Brooke, Jennifer Nettles, and Lucy Wainwright Roche.

Non-performance career

Saliers is a co-owner of Watershed, a restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia. Emily was one of the initial investors in the Flying Biscuit Cafe. She was a co-founder of the (now-defunct) Common Pond environmental gift shop in Atlanta, Georgia.

Saliers has co-written a book with her father, Don Saliers, a retired theology professor at Candler School of Theology at Emory University, called A Song to Sing, a Life to Live: Reflections on Music as Spiritual Practice. Emily and her father attended book signings and church appearances around the US in support of the book, including the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. in May 2005 and October 2007.

Personal life

Saliers married her longtime girlfriend, former Indigo Girls tour manager Tristin Chipman at New York City Hall in 2013. Chipman, a Canadian, is from Calgary, but she spent most of her adult life in Toronto," according to Saliers between songs when performing onstage in Vancouver in 2013. The couple already had a daughter, Cleo, born in February of that year.

Saliers had a passion for wine collecting, with a wine cellar that was reported to be at 2,000 bottles, but in 2015 she announced that she had given up drinking.

Saliers assisted in funding a music room at Emory University's Schwartz Center for Performing Arts which was named for her parents Don and Jane Saliers.

References

Emily Saliers Wikipedia