You can credit the pandemic — and the misery and free time it brought with it — for bringing both the twanger and the songwriter out of Molly Brandt.
“I always wanted to write songs, but lacked the self-confidence,” recalled Brandt, who had been involved in music most of her life. She played piano as a kid and performed in a jazz combo coming out of college.
“During COVID,” she continued, “I was broke, bored, alone, all of that. It was like: If I’m ever going to do it, now’s the time.”
When Brandt did finally start writing tunes in her mid-20s, it made sense to her to channel them though her country music influences. See: the aforementioned “broke, bored, alone” part, key ingredients in good country songs.
Just a few years later, Brandt is now a leading name in an exciting new wave of alt-twang/Americana acts in the Twin Cities scene. (We spotlight four more artists in this wave below.)
Her first album, “Surrender to the Night” — made up of some of those first songs she wrote while in lockdown — earned her a smattering of radio play and a best Americana artist nod from the Midwest Country Music Awards last year. Her second album, “American Saga,” already arrived last week and is being celebrated with a hometown release party Friday at Icehouse in Minneapolis.
Brandt is proud to be part of a new crop of smart and meaningful twangers — a tide in which “you’ll see members of the queer community taking line-dancing lessons at the Eagles Club” she noted. Or you’ll see young, progressive singers like her taking part in Shania Twain or Dolly Parton tribute shows at the Turf Club.
“A lot of us grew up listening to country music but then rejected it when it really started to lack depth and become pandering,” Brandt said.