In large part due to their implicit semantic modeling, self-supervised learning (SSL) methods have significantly increased the performance of valence recognition in speech emotion recognition (SER) systems. Yet, their large size may often hinder practical implementations. In this work, we take HuBERT as an example of an SSL model and analyze the relevance of each of its layers for SER. We show that shallow layers are more important for arousal recognition while deeper layers are more important for valence. This observation motivates the importance of additional textual information for accurate valence recognition, as the distilled framework lacks the depth of its large-scale SSL teacher. Thus, we propose an audio-textual distilled SSL framework that, while having only ~20% of the trainable parameters of a large SSL model, achieves on par performance across the three emotion dimensions (arousal, valence, dominance) on the MSP-Podcast v1.10 dataset.