Molly Stone Finds Strength in Softness on 'The Softies'
- Melodrift Team
- Feb 23
- 1 min read

Molly Stone’s The Softies unfolds with a sense of quiet intimacy, inviting listeners into a space where softness feels intentional rather than fragile. Across four tracks, Stone lets her gentle vocals float over minimal, warm production, creating a dreamlike calm that feels both personal and immersive. It’s an EP that doesn’t rush to make its point, instead trusting stillness, space and subtlety to carry its emotional weight.
The Softies is rooted in clarity and reflection. Stone’s songwriting embraces vulnerability with a steady hand, allowing moments of seld-awareness and loss to surface naturally. “Maybe I’m A Handful” and “Glitter” shimmer with underrstated honesty, while “You Left So Suddenly” captures grief, reflecting on the loss of her father without ever tripping into melodrama. Each song feels like a long exhale, where meaning lingers in her sharp songwriting.
With its blend of folk-tinged pop and acoustic textures, The Softies sits comfortably alongside artists like Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Hozier, while maintaining a distinctly unique intimate tone. Closing track “I Just Wanna Give You Love,” featuring Nathan Thomas, adds connection, bringing the debut EP to a reassuring close. Subtle in scale, The Softies emotional resonance runs deep, offering a tender listening experience that awares patience, humour and vulnerability.
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