Courtney Love's anarchy violinist returns to the stage and is keeping the spotlight all to herself. Fresh off the road as Ms. Love's touring bandmate, and with appearances on Leno and Letterman, glossy magazine centerfolds, and guest spots on the albums of such artists as Love, Billy Corgan, and more under her corset strings, Emilie Autumn's devilishly dark lyrics and industrial-strength voice reinvent gothic for the masses.Chosen by Interview Magazine as one of their 14 Artists to Watch, EA's theatrical stage show is a sexy circus of gothic burlesque backed by her all-girl band known underground as the Bloody Crumpets. But as the sole composer, performer, and producer of her dramatic new album, OPHELIAC, EA gets personal. Written in the style she calls victoriandustrial, OPHELIAC draws upon EA's influences as a child prodigy classical violinist and combines them with her passion for the harsh industrialism of Laibach & Front 242, the sublime melodicism of Depeche Mode, and the drama of Moi Dix