Jay Brannan | |
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Brannan performs in Edinburgh, Scotland, in August 2008 |
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Background information | |
Born | March 29, 1982 [1] |
Genres | Indie Folk |
Occupations | Singer-songwriter |
Instruments | Singing, guitar |
Years active | 2006–present |
Labels | Great Depression Records |
Website | jaybrannan.com |
Jay Brannan (born March 29, 1982) is an American singer-songwriter and actor. He was born in Texas and briefly studied in Ohio, but moved to California to become an actor. Brannan appeared in the 2006 movie Shortbus, which included one of his songs in its soundtrack, and began to build a fan base by performing on YouTube. He released an EP and acted in Holding Trevor in 2007. Since then, he has toured and released two albums.
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Brannan was born 1982 in Texas in a middle-class family and grew up as the son of a petroleum engineer and a teacher.[2][3][4] He described his family as conservative Baptists and discussed their difficulty with accepting his homosexuality.[5][6] Brannan went to college for one semester in Cincinnati, Ohio, and went to California, first to Palm Springs and later to Los Angeles, trying to become an actor.[2][4] In 2002, he was shown a casting notice and, after the end of a relationship, moved to New York City and submitted an audition tape.[2]
Brannan was cast in 2003 for the movie Shortbus, which featured him in an explicit sex scene, and worked as a proofreader and in other jobs to support himself.[7] He contributed the song "Soda Shop" to the film's soundtrack, which he stated was his "first professionally recorded track".[7] The song was also released on Team Love Records.[8] Brannan began to record sparse music videos for YouTube, accompanying himself on the guitar, and built an international fan base without corporate sponsorship, using MySpace and Blogspot.[9][10] In 2007, he appeared in the movie Holding Trevor as the promiscuous best friend of the protagonist, and released a limited-edition EP with fours songs named disasterpiece or Unmastered, adding two additional songs for a 2008 re-release.[3][11]
In July 2008, Brannan released the album goddamned through his own label, Great Depression Records, and toured ten dates, a departure from his previous practice of short tours of about four concerts.[9][12] The same year, Brannan left his proofreading job and sustained himself with earnings from concerts and merchandise.[10] His second album, In Living Cover, was released in 2009 and reached number ten on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart for the week of July 25, 2009.[13] Brannan promoted the album in an interview on ABC News's Now in July 2009.[14]
Brannan is a tenor.[2] Allmusic described his style as contemporary singer-songwriter and compared him to female artists, including Ani DiFranco, Lisa Loeb, Sinéad O'Connor, and Liz Phair.[3] Goddamned was described as lo-fi and Brannan compared his concerts to intimate performances in his home.[10][15] He has performed with Terra Naomi and both were compared in style and described as performing indie folk.[15] The New York Times stated in 2006 that Brannan was sometimes compared to singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright and that Brannan saw himself as echoing the angry and sad sound of female singers like Tracy Chapman and Joni Mitchell.[2]