Series
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Judeline es el Futuro

October 16, 2024
We welcome Judeline, accomplished songwriter and multi-instrumentalist to talk about her future plans and what’s next on her journey.
Show transcript
00:00
Help us. Welcome Jude Line,
00:02
a 21 year old Spanish singer who just dropped her new single
00:06
Sar Clos de Plata and has new music for us on
00:09
the way. Thank you for joining us on me.
00:15
We're so happy to have you.
00:17
Thank you for having me.
00:18
Of course. So tell me what inspired you to write.
00:21
Tart De Plata. OK.
00:23
So Tart de Plata means mm comus silver earrings.
00:30
Yeah. So that's how we called earrings in the south of
00:34
Spain usually spend or Arete or whatever.
00:38
So, yeah, and it's like the story of,
00:41
you know, having this love with this guy and you
00:45
left on purpose your earrings on his house.
00:48
I I like that.
00:49
So you purposely leave the earrings.
00:51
Yeah. Kind of,
00:52
it's like it's a situation you don't know how it going in
00:57
Espana. Do you guys call it situationship?
01:00
See now because people,
01:02
I don't know, everyone wants to have the American slang or
01:06
whatever they switch a lot with,
01:09
with the English and we call it situations actually,
01:12
I think so. Perico ju ju I know you mentioned your
01:23
father's from Venezuela, right?
01:25
How have your Venezuelan roots shaped your music and,
01:28
and played a part in,
01:29
in your role as an artist.
01:31
So yeah, he grew up in Caracas and I never been
01:34
there. I never been in Venezuela,
01:36
but I feel like he made an effort to,
01:39
to bring the culture in our home.
01:42
Yeah, I,
01:43
I listen to Venezuelan music for all my childhood.
01:46
Then I don't know the food,
01:48
the, the stories my dad told me about caracas.
01:51
OK. I know you're from Spain.
01:52
You mentioned you lived in Andalusia,
01:54
right? I Yeah,
01:55
I'm based right now in Madrid but I am,
01:57
I am Andalusian. So I mean I've never been to Spain
02:00
I'm dying to go but I do know you guys have
02:03
la siesta, right?
02:05
I tell everyone over here.
02:07
I think we need to just do it and start the job
02:09
over here. Like I feel like America over here.
02:12
We need some of the things that happen over here.
02:14
People work a lot here.
02:15
People are workaholics like yes,
02:19
there's been no days off.
02:20
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
02:21
It's crazy. Especially Andalucia.
02:23
We are famous people.
02:25
All people say that we only want to sleep and go to
02:27
parties and eat food and sleep again.
02:30
Yeah. People of the rest of us Spain say but we
02:33
all have a little bit of siesta.
02:34
You know when you have lunch,
02:36
you need a little rest for the s para la di is
02:40
good for your body.
02:41
But the system you you need to take a little sip like
02:44
a little nap and then,
02:46
and then you come back and do what you have to do
02:48
and then you go back and that's how we live happily and
02:50
that's how we should live over and it's good for your skin
02:53
for your hair,
02:54
for your mental health.
02:55
And this is so important.
02:56
We were talking about this the other day report.
02:59
Apparently, Gen Z so loves be.
03:02
Apparently we're not sustaining jobs over here in America.
03:05
I say if we adopt him because we care about our mental
03:08
health, we're very mindful.
03:10
We're very, you know,
03:10
considerate about. Exactly.
03:13
OK. So you mentioned in Andalucia La Fiesta,
03:16
la siesta. How is a party in Spain different than a
03:19
party here in the US?
03:21
First of all, like you meet your friends at 11 in
03:25
the night, then you have a little wine at home with
03:30
you at 11 and then we go,
03:32
we go to club like two o'clock,
03:35
2 a.m. Oh wow,
03:37
three hour pre game and you hit the first club at two
03:39
in the morning. If you go earlier,
03:42
there will be nobody in the club.
03:45
So I think like here people do it earlier.
03:47
No, here the club closes at two in the morning.
03:50
That's crazy. I know you were just at New York Fashion
03:54
week, right? It was so cool.
03:57
I kind of love New York.
03:59
Yeah, I like it.
04:00
You walk everywhere. There's a lot of stuff you can do
04:03
It smells a little bit worse than July.
04:07
Tell me, how do you connect fashion and,
04:10
and your music? I think it's very important.
04:12
Like you take care of every single part of your project.
04:15
Like the static, the sound,
04:17
the music. So I think fashion is a very important part
04:20
of you too. I love that.
04:22
So can you share your process for writing and making music?
04:26
I think I just go to the studio.
04:28
I usually, I only write in the studio or maybe,
04:31
I don't know, idea comes in the train or the plane
04:33
but usually I just sit in the studio,
04:35
I take a sampler and I write on it and then like
04:40
the arrangement part and the production part is like the longer s
04:46
so Imo and Mo or I hear you have a new album
04:52
coming out, right?
04:54
Tell me about it.
04:55
So it's coming out very,
04:57
very soon. Yes,
04:58
I've been doing it for almost like 23 years.
05:01
It was a very long process,
05:02
but I'm very excited and I'm very proud of my first album
05:06
being this, you know,
05:07
that's amazing. It's a lot of work on it.
05:09
And the last part of the album I was so tired.
05:11
I could not listen to anything.
05:14
I was like a but now there have been some months that
05:18
I didn't listen to it.
05:19
I'm so in love and I'm very,
05:20
very proud of it and,
05:22
and it's gonna, the world's gonna see it.
05:24
Yeah. So the name is Bodri and it's my first baby
05:28
So much. So where can we follow and,
05:38
and keep up with you and your music and your journey?
05:41
So you can follow me on Instagram or Twitter or whatever you
05:44
want. My name is Juline Juli Punto in Instagram and yeah
05:49
whatever you want to listen on Spotify.
05:52
Amazing. I'll be listening.
05:54
Yeah. Thank you for having me.
05:55
Thank you so much.