Hope Sandoval

Singer

Birthday June 24, 1966

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Los Angeles, California, U.S.

DEATH DATE YYYY, (57 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 152 cm

#5407 Most Popular

1966

Hope Sandoval (born June 24, 1966) is an American singer-songwriter who is the lead singer of Mazzy Star and Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions.

Sandoval was born June 24, 1966, in Los Angeles, to Mexican-American parents and raised in East Los Angeles.

Her father was a butcher and her mother worked for a potato chip manufacturing company.

She has one sibling and seven half-siblings.

Her parents separated when she was a child and she was raised primarily by her mother.

She attended Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra, but struggled socially and academically, and was placed in special education classes.

She began to forgo her classes, instead staying home and listening to records.

"It's just like anybody elsesome people, most people don't wanna go to school. They just don't want to", Sandoval recalled.

"I was just somebody who got away with it… There wasn't really anyone watching".

She eventually dropped out of high school.

Sandoval took an interest in music at an early age, and at age 13 was particularly influenced by the Rolling Stones.

1970

Bert Jansch plays guitar on two tracks, and the album features two covers, "Butterfly Mornings" from the film The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970) and Jesus and Mary Chain's "Drop".

1980

Sandoval performed with the band Opal in the late 1980s alongside David Roback and long-time Roback collaborator Kendra Smith.

After Smith's abrupt departure during a tour of the UK (hurling her guitar to the floor at the Hammersmith gig), Sandoval took over lead vocals.

At the end of the tour, Roback and Sandoval began writing together and formed the alternative rock band Mazzy Star.

1986

In 1986, she formed the folk music duo Going Home with Sylvia Gomez and sent a demo tape to David Roback.

He contacted the duo and suggested that he would "play guitar for you guys".

The material recorded by Gomez, Sandoval and Roback has yet to be released.

1990

The first Mazzy Star album, She Hangs Brightly, was released in 1990.

While not a commercial success, this album did establish Mazzy Star as a band with a unique sound.

1993

The band had a surprise breakthrough hit single released in October 1993.

"Fade into You"from the band's second album So Tonight That I Might Seewas recorded one year before it became a success.

There is a continuity between the sounds and moods established on Mazzy Star's first two albums and the band's third, Among My Swan.

1997

Mazzy Star went on hiatus in 1997.

2000

Sandoval formed The Warm Inventions in 2000 and released her first solo album Bavarian Fruit Bread in 2001, which she recorded with My Bloody Valentine drummer Colm Ó Cíosóig.

The album differed in terms of theme, voice, and instrumentation from that of her work with Mazzy Star.

The Warm Inventions released two EPs, At the Doorway Again in 2000 and Suzanne in 2002 but did not win commercial success, with one video on MTV and little radio play.

2008

Sandoval recorded a song, "Wild Roses", for a compilation CD released by Air France, In the Air (2008).

2009

Hope Sandoval and The Warm Inventions released their second album, Through the Devil Softly, on September 29, 2009.

In 2009, Sandoval confirmed in an interview with Rolling Stone that Mazzy Star was still active: "It's true we're still together. We're almost finished [with the record]. But I have no idea what that means."

2010

Sandoval has toured and collaborated with other artists, including Massive Attack, for whom she sang "Paradise Circus" on the 2010 album Heligoland and the 2016 single "The Spoils".

Sandoval and her band were chosen by Matt Groening to perform at the edition of the All Tomorrow's Parties festival he curated in May 2010 in Minehead, England.

The group also played the ATP New York 2010 music festival in Monticello, New York in September 2010 at the request of film director Jim Jarmusch.

2011

In October 2011, the group released the single "Common Burn"/"Lay Myself Down", their first material in 15 years.

2012

The group stated that they had plans to release the album in 2012.

2013

In July 2013, "California", the first single from the new album was released.

The album, Seasons of Your Day, was released in September 2013.

2016

On March 9, 2016, it was confirmed that Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions would release a 7" vinyl single titled "Isn't It True" for Record Store Day 2016. The track also features Jim Putnam of Radar Bros. A music video for the song was released on April 19, and is dedicated to Richie Lee of Acetone. The Warm Inventions' third studio album, Until the Hunter, was released on November 4 through the band's own independent record label, Tendril Tales. A second single from the album, "Let Me Get There" featuring Kurt Vile, was released on September 23.

Sandoval contributed vocals to "I Don't Mind" by Psychic Ills, which was released on March 29, 2016.

2020

David Roback died in Los Angeles on February 24, 2020 from cancer.