Haim photos by the L.A. Times
Meet Este, from left, Alana and Danielle of the L.A. group Haim. The three sisters with the long locks and voice chops give off a slinky pop vibe with splashes of rock and ‘90s R&B. Drummer Dash Hutton, formerly with Los Angeles bands Wires on Fire and Slang Chicken, also plays with the band.
By Christy Khoshaba (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
Haim -- rhymes with “dime” -- is a pop-rock band of three sisters from L.A. who’ve been ruling the music charts lately with their debut album “Days Are Gone.” Here, we look at the trio.
The trio grew up in the San Fernando Valley, harvesting their talent in their family’s band Rockenhaim. Their parents loved ‘70s classic rock and passed it on to their offspring with ease. The ladies then took those sounds and infused a little early ‘80s pop ‘n’ rock. (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
Haim reigned over the U.K. charts with their debut album “Days Are Gone,” beating Justin Timberlake’s latest. The group says this album encapsulates a sound they’ve worked years to perfect. (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
“People our age, we grew up with Pharrell,” Danielle, right, said. “But we still wanted to make [the album] sound like a band.” As Times music writer Mikael Wood wrote, “ ‘Days Are Gone’ pulls from any number of instantly recognizable sources -- Michael Jackson, Fleetwood Mac, Pat Benatar -- yet never really sounds like any of them.” (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
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The group has played in shows alongside Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, the Henry Clay People and Ke$ha. They also performed at the 2013 Glastonbury festival. (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
The sisters performed to a sold-out audience in their hometown of Los Angeles at the Fonda Theatre. Each lady has her role: Alana, from left, takes charge of rap-mixtape drum claps and small-hours synth pads. Danielle is the frontwoman with powerful vocal cords, yet quiet on stage. And Este rocks out on the bass, rounding up their talents as a trio. Alana and Este also contribute vocals. (Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)