Molly Jenson

Molly Rachel Jenson (born March 20, 1979) is a singer/songwriter from San Diego, California.[1]

Molly Jenson
Molly Jenson in 2005
Background information
Born (1979-03-20) March 20, 1979
OriginCalifornia
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
InstrumentsVocals, guitar
Years active2007–present
LabelsBully! Pulpit Records
Nettwerk Music Group
Websitemollyjenson.com

Origins

At age twelve, Jenson was a vocalist in her first band, named "GALS". The band was composed of several of her classmates.[2] For about a year, Jenson was a vocalist with the Christian rock band, Everybodyduck, which toured California for several years playing churches and camps. Other members of the band included Darin McWatters as the lead vocalist, guitarists Josh Blanken, Cory Knapp and Tim Sovinec, and drummer Mike Day.

Music career

She won the award for "Best Acoustic Act" at the 2007 San Diego Music Awards.[3] In April 2007, Teen Vogue Magazine named her "One of the three best new artists on MySpace".[1] In 2007, she collaborated with Switchfoot lead singer Jon Foreman on his solo Spring EP. In May, 2008, she signed to producer Mark Joseph's Bully! Pulpit Records, in a joint partnership with Nettwerk Music Group (home to top artists like Sarah McLachlan, Avril Lavigne and The Cardigans).[4] Her first album on Bully! Pulpit/Nettwerk "Maybe Tomorrow", produced by Greg Laswell, was released worldwide on March 3, 2009, featuring a duet with Foreman titled "Do You Only Love The Ones Who Look Like You." In September 2008 Jenson's song "Give It Time" was selected to appear in the Freshman Survival Kit, which went out to 75,000 incoming college freshman. In the fall of 2008, Jenson's song, "Wait For You Here," was used in the premiere of the new NBC Television show Knight Rider, while another song "Give It Time" was used in the CW show Privileged. More recently, Molly Jenson was featured on Sherwood's third album, Qu on the song "Worn".

Live performances/Tours

Jenson toured in Japan in 2008[5] and has toured in the United States and Europe.[2]

Musical style & Musicianship

Jenson's work has been compared to many other musicians. In 2009, Relevant Magazine drew comparisons to Mazzy Star and Leona Naess[1] while crosswalk.com likened her to Missy Higgins, Bethany Dillon, A Fine Frenzy, and Ingrid Michelson.[6]

In 2010, Dean Nelson reported that Teen Vogue saw similarities to the sounds of Norah Jones and Sheryl Crowe, while drawing his own comparisons to Joni Mitchell and Bette Midler.[2]

Discography

Albums

Maybe Tomorrow (released April 2005 — re-released March 3, 2009)[7]

  1. Give It Time (4:09)
  2. Beginning Here (4:10)
  3. Maybe Tomorrow (3:45)
  4. Thinking of You (3:42)
  5. And You Were (2:36)
  6. The Edgy 8 Ball Song (4:26)
  7. Alongside You (3:02)
  8. Alongside You (Part 2) (1:52)
  9. Wednesday (1:45)
  10. I'm Sorry For Me (5:09)
  11. Thank You My Friend (4:37)
  12. Wait For You Here (4:49)
  13. Do You Only Love The Ones Who Look Like You (3:46)

Awards and nominations

Year Nominated Work Organization Award Result
2006 Maybe Tomorrow 16th Annual San Diego Music Awards Best Pop Album Nominated[7]
2007
17th Annual San Diego Music Awards Best Acoustic Act Won[8]
gollark: Basically, the top one transmits the powercell's fullness level (obtained via a computercraft thing since comparators appear to not work) and the bottom one receives that, reads the reactor's buffer level (it was meant to be heat but somehow I just get the RF output buffer level), and if the powercell is below full and the buffer empty it turns the reactor on.
gollark: Some screenshots of the controllers.
gollark: TIS-100 is a weird massively-parallel architecture of nodes running simple assembly programs communicating with each other.
gollark: TIS-3D is basically TIS-100 in Minecraft.
gollark: I'm amazed at how non-terribly my really simple TIS-3D reactor controller runs.

References

  1. CJ Casciotta (June 15, 2009). "Artist Spotlight: Molly Jenson". Relevant Magazine. Winter Park, Florida: Relevant Media Group. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  2. Nelson, Dean (July 2010). "Molly-Jenson-Oh-My-Gosh-It's-Me" (PDF). Risen Magazine. Del Mar, CA: Allan Camaisa. pp. 28–34. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  3. "2007 San Diego Music Award Lists".
  4. Bully! Pulpit news release
  5. Mark Joseph (June 2008). "Lessons From Obama: Fans Use Social Networks To Take Freshman Singer Molly Jenson To The Top". Retrieved July 13, 2013.
  6. Andrea Dawn Goforth (March 1, 2009). "Maybe Tomorrow". Crosswalk.com. Richmond, VA: Salem Web Network. Archived from the original on July 29, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2013.
  7. "Amazon.com: Molly Jenson: Songs, Albums, Pictures, Bios". Retrieved July 13, 2013.
  8. "San Diego Music Awards - 2007 Winners". Retrieved July 13, 2013.
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