Molly Nilsson Explained

Molly Nilsson
Years Active:2007–present
Birth Date:14 December 1984
Birth Place:Stockholm, Sweden

Molly Lilly Maria Nilsson (born 14 December 1984) is a Swedish singer-songwriter and musician. She is the owner of an independent record label, Dark Skies Association, founded in 2009. As of 2004, Nilsson resides in Berlin.[1]

Early life

Nilsson is from Stockholm; she was born in Gröndal and grew up in Södermalm, in a non-musical family.[2] Both of her parents were communists.[3] She has described her father, a graphic designer, as her "biggest fan".[4]

In school, Nilsson had some piano lessons and a punk rock band with friends, where they "played a little bit", but mostly "just hung out".[3] Growing up, she listened to a lot of 1970s punk from the United Kingdom.[5] As a teenager, she sometimes worked as a DJ.[4]

She began her creative pursuits in comics and writing. Soon she began experimenting with a friend's keyboard and transitioned from visual media into songwriting.

Music

Nilsson moved to Berlin to pursue music. She worked in the cloakroom of Berlin nightclub Berghain, while saving money to write songs on weekdays.[6] She released her first album in 2008 titled These Things Take Time, which she released on CD-R with just 500 copies. In 2009, she released another self-produced album, Europa. Nilsson gained more visibility in 2011 when her song "Hey Moon" from These Things Take Time, was covered by John Maus for his album We Must Become the Pitiless Censors of Ourselves.[7] After releasing another album, Zenith, in 2015, Nilsson began a world tour.

Nilsson produces and performs her music on her own, though she co-releases much of her music on Dark Skies Association and Glasgow's Night School Records.[8] Nilsson's style features minimalist arrangements of synthesizers and drum beats and is often categorized as dark pop or lo-fi synth-pop.[9] [10] She cites solitude as a necessary and important part of her creative process. During live performances, Nilsson often sings over a CD of her own work.

One of Nilsson's heroes is Polish socialist Rosa Luxemburg, the subject of Nilsson's song "Obnoxiously Talented". In an interview with Tribune magazine, she said: "[A]part from her work and legacy, I've really developed a relationship with Rosa Luxemburg on a human level. It's great to find people in history who can give you an example of what's possible, or how you can live your life, or what you should strive for."[3] Nilsson's album Extreme (2022), was released on the date of Luxemburg's death, 15 January.[11]

Discography

Studio albums

Extended plays

Singles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ritchie. Kevin. 4 October 2012. Press-shy Swedish songwriter opens up . 2017-12-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20171001215034/https://nowtoronto.com/music/molly-nilsson/ . 2017-10-01 .
  2. Web site: Weirdo . Bobby . Molly Nilsson on New Album Twenty Twenty, The Importance of Context, and Excitement for the Next Decade . Weirdo Music Forever . 25 November 2018 . 7 October 2023.
  3. Web site: Molly Nilsson: 'Leave the Pessimism to Conservatives'. Brown. Alexander. 23 January 2023. The Tribune. 6 February 2023.
  4. Web site: Katz . Juli . de . Molly Nilsson über ihre Musik: "Ich liebe Humor" . . 22 September 2019 . 7 October 2023.
  5. Web site: Adam . Cherry . Entrevista a Molly Nilsson: "Es mejor, y a veces más constructivo, estar loco que triste." . es . Indienauta . 6 May 2019 . 7 October 2023.
  6. Web site: Molly Nilsson: the synthpop star embracing hope and loneliness. Beaumont-Thomas. Ben. 5 November 2018. The Guardian. London.
  7. Web site: Molly Nilsson Artist Biography. Sendra. Tim. AllMusic.
  8. Web site: Molly Nilsson's 'Twenty Twenty' Exposes The Fragments of Life. Mandel. Leah. 25 October 2018. NPR.
  9. Web site: Molly Nilsson "Days of Dust". Kemp. Sophie. 13 September 2018. Pitchfork.
  10. Web site: Molly Nilsson: Planetary Vistas . 23 March 2016. Mallon. Steve. Crack Magazine.
  11. https://nightschoolrecords.com/molly-nilsson-extreme-the-new-album-coming-january-2022/