Soccer Mommy


Sophia Regina Allison, better known by her stage name Soccer Mommy, is a Swiss-born American singer-songwriter and musician from Nashville, Tennessee.

History

Allison was born in Switzerland on May 27, 1997 and grew up in Nashville, Tennessee. She attended Nashville School of the Arts, a specialty high school where she studied guitar and played in the swing band.
She first picked up a guitar at age six and started making music. She began posting home-recorded songs to Bandcamp as Soccer Mommy in 2015, during the summer when she was about to leave for college at New York University. While in college, Allison played her first show as Soccer Mommy, at the community art space Silent Barn in Bushwick, Brooklyn, and shortly after landed a record deal with Fat Possum. She dropped out of college after two years in 2017 to return to Nashville and pursue her music career.
Her first full-length album as Soccer Mommy, For Young Hearts, was released in 2016 on Orchid Tapes. Her second album, Collection, was released in 2017 on Fat Possum Records. Her debut album proper, titled Clean, was released on March 2, 2018.
She has toured with Stephen Malkmus, Mitski, Kacey Musgraves, Jay Som, Slowdive, Frankie Cosmos, Liz Phair, Phoebe Bridgers and others. She joined Paramore and Foster the People on the first half of their 2018 summer tour. Soccer Mommy opened for Vampire Weekend in the fall. She also opened for a few shows for Wilco in the fall of 2019. In February 2020, she played at one of Bernie Sanders's presidential rallies and endorsed his 2020 presidential campaign.

Influences

Allison cites musicians Natalie Imbruglia, Mitski, Slowdive, The Dixie Chicks, Taylor Swift and Avril Lavigne as well as the cities of Nashville and New York as influences. Lavigne's Under My Skin was the first CD she ever owned.
Allison has said that her music is influenced by pop music and she strives to include catchy elements in her songs.

Discography

Albums

Studio albums

Demo albums

Compilation albums

Extended plays

Singles

External sources