
Electronic artist and activist Kiran Gandhi steps into her most intimate chapter yet, building a five-track R&B-pop project from the ground up inside a women-led songwriting camp.
Madame Gandhi has never made music quietly. Since her viral 2015 London Marathon free-bleeding moment catapulted her into global cultural conversations, the Harvard MBA-holding, M.I.A.-drumming, TED Fellow-turned-solo artist has used every release as a statement. But Love Letters From Brooklyn—her newest project, dropping March 20, 2026—hits differently. This one is personal.
The five-track album is dedicated to Madame Gandhi’s partner of four years, gold-medalist boxer Lesley Sackey. The distance between them shaped everything here.
Love Letters From Brooklyn was born inside a three-day songwriting camp at Hyperballad Music in Brooklyn, developed in partnership with Gender Amplified, the organization dedicated to empowering women and gender-expansive music producers.
This is Madame Gandhi’s second all-female writing camp, following her first with We Make Noise. She doesn’t just talk about equity, she builds it into every session, giving women and gender-expansive producers full creative control. The album proves it: organic but modern, percussive yet intimate, refusing the over-polished gloss of mainstream pop. Raw vocals, live instruments, and an R&B-infused electronic backbone create a sound that breathes, moves, and demands attention.

“You Are Love(d)” opens the project with cosmic optimism—a meditation on synchronicity and the feeling that love arrived exactly when it was supposed to.
“Jet Lagged” captures what long-distance relationships actually feel like: late-night messages, blurred time zones, the particular ache of wanting someone who is physically unreachable.
“All In All” is the resilience track. Introspective and forward-moving, it’s about staying open when life resists certainty.
“I Believe It” leans into full emotional surrender—the joy of receiving love completely, without armor.
“Gold” closes the album with warmth and magnetic pull, a radiant portrait of instant connection that somehow still feels like home.
On the evening of the release—Friday, March 20, 2026, 7–9 PM—Madame Gandhi hosts an exclusive launch event at National Sawdust in Williamsburg. The event opens with a grounding meditation honoring the spring equinox, followed by a live band performance, album previews, and a vinyl signing and meet-and-greet.
Lesley Sackey will be in attendance. So will Gandhi’s mother, New York humanitarian Meera Gandhi.
