Five years to the day after Villain changed everything, Lily Rose hits a career milestone most artists only dream about — a platinum record, a sold-out tour, and a fully realized debut album.

In this conversation, Lily Rose sits down with Erik Zachary to talk about the long road from part-time jobs and basketball refereeing to standing on the Opry stage, sharing it with artists she grew up idolizing. They dig into what actually makes a song connect, why Nashville has quietly become a pop-rock incubator, and how Lily studies crowds, choruses, and human behavior as closely as she studies music.

Lily opens up about:


  
The five-year journey of Villain and why it still closes her shows



  
Her debut album I Know What I Want and why cohesion mattered more than chasing singles



  
Writing with intention, collaboration, and honesty instead of formulas



  
Touring life, burnout, and why downtime fuels her creativity



  
How live arrangements, crowd energy, and discipline separate good shows from unforgettable ones




This episode is a masterclass in patience, perspective, and playing the long game — for artists, creators, and anyone trying to build something that lasts.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Spout Podcast

Spout Podcast & Studio71

Lily Rose: The Song That Changed Everything — Five Years Later

JAN 5, 202635 MIN
Spout Podcast

Lily Rose: The Song That Changed Everything — Five Years Later

JAN 5, 202635 MIN

Description

Five years to the day after Villain changed everything, Lily Rose hits a career milestone most artists only dream about — a platinum record, a sold-out tour, and a fully realized debut album. In this conversation, Lily Rose sits down with Erik Zachary to talk about the long road from part-time jobs and basketball refereeing to standing on the Opry stage, sharing it with artists she grew up idolizing. They dig into what actually makes a song connect, why Nashville has quietly become a pop-rock incubator, and how Lily studies crowds, choruses, and human behavior as closely as she studies music. Lily opens up about: The five-year journey of Villain and why it still closes her shows Her debut album I Know What I Want and why cohesion mattered more than chasing singles Writing with intention, collaboration, and honesty instead of formulas Touring life, burnout, and why downtime fuels her creativity How live arrangements, crowd energy, and discipline separate good shows from unforgettable ones This episode is a masterclass in patience, perspective, and playing the long game — for artists, creators, and anyone trying to build something that lasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices