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facts about danielle haim.html

14 Facts About Danielle Haim

facts about danielle haim.html1.

Danielle Sari Haim was born on February 16,1989 and is an American musician.

2.

Danielle Haim is the lead guitarist and vocalist of the pop rock band Haim, which consists of her two sisters, Este Haim and Alana Haim.

3.

Danielle Sari Haim was born and raised in the San Fernando Valley, California to a Jewish family.

4.

Danielle Haim's father is Israeli-born former professional soccer player Mordechai and her mother, Donna Rose, is a former elementary school art teacher from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

5.

Danielle Haim started playing music at an early age, and was encouraged by her parents to pursue the guitar.

6.

Julian Casablancas saw Danielle Haim perform on that tour, and asked her to be a part of his touring band, which went into rehearsals two days after wrapping Jenny Lewis's tour.

7.

Danielle Haim appears in the official music video of Casablancas' song "11th Dimension".

8.

Danielle Haim released their first studio album titled Days Are Gone in September 2013.

9.

From 2013 to early 2022, Danielle Haim dated producer Ariel Rechtshaid, who produced all three of Danielle Haim's albums.

10.

Danielle Haim plays piano and drums, the latter of which she typically plays for the band's studio recordings.

11.

Vocally, Danielle Haim is an alto, with Abby Johnston of The Austin Chronicle describing her vocal delivery as "understated".

12.

The Pop Break contributor Jason Kundrath described Danielle Haim as being "in full command of her low alto, stacking her syllables close together, and using each one percussively to create rhythmic hooks on top of her grade A melodies".

13.

When Danielle Haim opted not to sing during a 2018 live performance upon contracting the flu, The Guardian music critic Kitty Empire found the absence of Danielle Haim's vocals to be disorienting as a listener, opining that she "packs a gravitas her two sisters lack".

14.

Danielle Haim herself admitted to being a shy person who "come[s] out of my shell on stage", an observation corroborated by DIY's Emma Snook.