Sandra Dolores Swanfeldt
Sacramento, California, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2009
Music
Press
Sacramento Bee, The (CA)
March 21, 2014
A distinctive, compelling voice
Author: Andy Furillo; Staff Writer
Edition: 1st State
Section: Ticket
Page: 8TK
You see it, you hear it, every Wednesday night in the Torch Club, at 5:30, amid happy-hour people jibber-jabbering about the events of the day, drinking a Lagunitas or Corona or maybe something with a higher octane level. Then the jukebox powers down, and the audio focus shifts to the strength and clarity of the greatest of all the musical instruments, the one that breathes energy and emotion into jazz or pop, country or funk, the blues, rock and roll, and plain, old-fashioned American folk.
It's the human voice, of course, and this one of unmistakable resonance kicks off the weekly open mic nights at the Torch, and then again later at Old Ironsides, and it also takes the stage once a month or more at the Delta King, and it wafts through coffeehouses and nightclubs all over the downtown/midtown Sacramento grid. It's trained, it's motivated, and it makes people stop what they're doing for a minute to find out where it's coming from.
This voice belongs to a vocalist named Sandra Dolores, whose Torch Club sets usually run about three songs before the hostess turns the stage over to the masses. She comes back again just before 8 to close the session with another song or two, usually behind a guitar that rings the same as her voice - clean and clear as the morning dew.
On Saturday night, Dolores is taking one of Sacramento's more prominent musical stages. Harlow's is having her over to mark the release of her new five-song compilation EP, "Anima." She'll be backed by drummer Tony Galioto, himself an open mic regular, and bass man Nate Riddle.
She said she'll be telling the stories off her EP originals "about all the different things that women go through, and emotions that we go through in this crazy ride." And she'll tell them over steady grooves that cross over from progressive folk to blues and even into accidental calypso rhythms featuring ukulele.
Just as she does live at the Torch or the "Old I," or at the Delta King, in recordings Dolores emits a definitive and distinctive vocal phrasing that cuts through the clatter of conversations in a neighborhood bar, of a busy day, of a distracted life. Hers is a voice that enhances a conversation or a drive home, with a propensity to captivate.
"When I started singing in Stockton, at the Blackwater, I realized I had something special when everybody would get quiet," Dolores said, about the club where she first went public five years ago. "Not that they didn't get quiet for other people, but I knew there was something special in it. People would constantly come up to me and talk to me about the song and tell me about their experiences - 'that song makes me think about this,' and then I would see that connection on their faces."
About 20 years ago Dolores' mother picked up on her 14-year-old daughter's tone and enrolled her in singing lessons. The Stockton girl worked out the pipes at the University of the Pacific's Conservatory of Music, developing range and refining her technique.
She lists Joni Mitchell and Joan Baez as influences. She covers Patsy Cline and Smokey Robinson.
A Sacramento resident for three years, Sandra Dolores has set aside day jobs and a marriage to define and expand the voice that is her own. These days, it pays the bills.
Her sound surprises the unsuspecting. It makes people nod and agree, makes them notice every time she steps up to the mic: This girl can sing.
Call The Bee's Andy Furillo, (916) 321-1141. Follow him on Twitter @andyfurillo.
Copyright (c) 2014 The Sacramento Bee
Record Number: SAC0070463797 - Sac Bee
Discography
Still working on that hot first release.
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Bio
A diamond in the rough, folk/pop singer/songwriter Sandra Dolores has been making waves throughout the central valley and Sacramento with an angelic voice and a devilish wit.
Influenced early on with vocal lessons at the University of the Pacific's Music Conservatory in Stockton, CA, singing in the church band, along with guitar lessons and choirs throughout high school, Sandra Dolores has refined her poetic, personal style. Working her way as a young woman in her 20s from the coffee shops and bars to center stage as a full-time musician at 34, leaving a marriage and day jobs to pursue her career, she uses these experiences to write relevant songs about love and life.
Shortly before the release of her first full length album Wait and See in 2011, Sandra moved to Sacramento and immersed herself in the local music scene. She is currently best known in the downtown Sacramento, CA area for hosting two successful Open Mics: The Torch Club and Old Ironsides. These weekly shows have shaped Sandra’s on-stage persona and performances into a finely crafted, unique story telling experience that is not easily forgotten by it’s listener.
"If I sense people are listening and focused, I will give short background stories on my songs, speaking lightheartedly to the crowd and to my band members. I call it having a conversation with my audience. I want them to feel like they are part of the performance. I am a story teller first and foremost. I write songs about my life, love, loss, joy and happiness." -Sandra Dolores
"Dolores emits a definitive and distinctive vocal phrasing that cuts through the clatter of conversations in a neighborhood bar, of a busy day, of a distracted life. Hers is a voice that enhances a conversation or a drive home, with a propensity to captivate." - Andy Furillo, Sac Bee
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