Dan Deacon | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Daniel Deacon |
Also known as | Pardalince Bird |
Born | [1] West Babylon, New York, United States | August 28, 1981
Origin | Baltimore, Maryland, United States |
Genres | Experimental, [2] electronic, [2] experimental pop, [2] psychedelic [3] |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, keyboards, synthesizer, guitar, trombone, tuba |
Years active | 2003–present |
Labels | Domino, Carpark, Milan Records, Mistletone Records, Wildfire Wildfire Records, Psych-o-Path, Standard Oil Records, Comfort Stand Records |
Members | Dan Deacon |
Past members | Chester Gwazda Jeremy Hyman Kevin O'Meara Denny Bowen Dave Jacober William Cashion Gerrit Welmers Jordan Kasey Benny Boeldt Andrew Bernstein Ryan Syrell Greg Fox Kate Levitt Sam Sowyrda Stephe Cooper Justin Frye Andrew Burt Josh Quillen Adam Sliwinski Jason Treuting Eric Beach |
Website | http://www.dandeacon.com |
Daniel Deacon (born August 28, 1981) is an American composer and musician based in Baltimore, Maryland.
Deacon is renowned for his live shows, where large-scale audience participation and interaction is often a major element of the performance. Since 2003, he has released five solo albums, including 2015's Gliss Riffer , released by Domino Records. His work as a film composer includes scoring the 2021 documentaries All Light, Everywhere and Ascension , both released as soundtrack albums by Milan Records, as well as Francis Ford Coppola's Twixt (with Osvaldo Golijov). His fifth solo studio album, titled Mystic Familiar , was released January 31, 2020 on Domino. [4]
Daniel Deacon was born and raised in West Babylon, New York on Long Island. He graduated from Babylon High School in 1999 where he was a member of the local ska band Channel 59 alongside Tim Daniels of The Complete Guide to Everything. [5] He later attended the Conservatory of Music at State University of New York at Purchase in Purchase, New York where, in addition to performing his solo material, he played in many bands, including tuba for Langhorne Slim and guitar in the improvisational grindcore band Rated R, and had a small mixed chamber ensemble. He completed his graduate studies in electro-acoustic and computer music composition. He studied under composer and conductor Joel Thome and Dary John Mizelle. [6] [7]
In 2004 he moved to Baltimore, Maryland and moved into the Copycat Building and, along with friends from SUNY Purchase, formed Wham City, an arts and music collective. [8]
His first two releases as a solo artist, Meetle Mice and Silly Hat vs Egale Hat were released on CD-R on Standard Oil Records in 2003 while he was a student at SUNY Purchase. The albums are collections of both computer music and live recordings of ensemble pieces, and are markedly different from the electronic-pop body of work that began with his first popular record, 2007's Spiderman of the Rings , in that most of the pieces are instrumentals and sound collages, and they contain almost no tracks where Deacon sings or uses vocal manipulation.[ citation needed ]
He followed those two albums with a set of records made up of sine wave compositions, Green Cobra Is Awesome Vs The Sun and Goose on the Loose. His next two releases were the EPs Twacky Cats on Comfort Stand Recordings and Acorn Master on Psych-o-path Records.
Spiderman of the Rings was Deacon's first commercially distributed full-length album, released by Carpark Records in May 2007. [9] The album was well received [10] and was included in the Best New Music section of Pitchfork . [11] The album was ranked as number 24 on the website's "Top 50 Albums of 2007". [12] Spiderman of the Rings marked the beginning of Deacon's body of recorded work as an electronic-pop musician; Deacon has stated the success of this record "completely changed my life in every possible way." [13]
The collaborative video-art piece Ultimate Reality was released as a DVD in November 2007 by Carpark Records and marked a return to composing music for others to perform. The pieces for percussion and electronics were performed by Jeremy Hyman of Ponytail and Kevin Omeara of Videohippos. The sonic pieces were set to collaged and heavily altered video created by Deacon's long time friend and collaborator Jimmy Joe Roche. [13]
Deacon's next album, entitled Bromst , was released on March 24, 2009. [14] It was produced by Chester Gwazda at Snow Ghost Studios in Whitefish, Montana and features live instruments including player piano and a variety of percussion instruments. The album was well received; Pitchfork gave it an 8.5/10 and placed it into the "best new music" section. [15] The album placed 46th among Pitchfork's "Top 50 Albums of 2009". [16]
His album America was released on August 28, 2012, on Domino Records in the US. Deacon has described the album as representing his conflicted feelings toward the country and world he calls home: "The inspiration for the music was my love of cross-country travel, seeing the landscapes of the United States, going from east to west and back again over the course of seasons. "The lyrics are inspired by my frustration, fear and anger towards the country and world I live in and am a part of. As I came closer to finishing the album these themes began to show themselves more frequently and greater clarity. There seemed no better world to encapsulate both inspirations than the simple beauty found in the word America." [17]
Gliss Riffer was released on Domino Records on February 24, 2015. Deacon describes the album title as "something that auto-correct wants to make sure that no one can actually type." The album was produced by Deacon alone, who notes that he created the album "trying to confront my own anxieties or insecurities and the stresses in my life." Gliss Riffer yielded the singles "Feel the Lightning" and "Learning to Relax", as well as a viral video animated in the exquisite corpse style for "When I Was Done Dying", produced by Adult Swim and featuring the work of nine different animators. [18] Gliss Riffer received four-star reviews from both The Guardian [19] and AllMusic. [20] In his A− review of the album for Consequence of Sound , Derek Staples noted that "the universal motifs of his discography are now refracted through a more personal lens", and praised the record's "new lyrical depth". [21]
In 2017, Deacon released a 10th-anniversary edition of Spiderman of the Rings that also included the soundtrack to 2007's Ultimate Reality. [22]
Deacon produced and co-wrote the album Riddles by Ed Schrader's Music Beat, released March 2, 2018 on Carpark Records. [23] Writing for NPR's All Songs Considered , Bob Boilen described Riddles as "a fascinating piece of work that is both ugly and beautiful, often at the same time", likening its sound to late-1970s records by Suicide and Pere Ubu. [24] Nina Corcoran noted in Pitchfork that "You can hear Deacon's style, especially that of 2012's America, all over this album: the gleeful piano fluttering in 'Riddles,' the manic percussion buried in fuzz on 'Dizzy Devil,' the thick wall of synth on 'Kid Radium.'" [25]
Deacon's fifth studio album, Mystic Familiar , was released on January 31, 2020. [4] A first video from the album, for the song "Sat By a Tree" starring Aparna Nancherla, was released October 29, 2019. [26] The second single from Mystic Familiar, "Become a Mountain", was released on January 13, 2020, with a video by animation studio Rapapawn. [27] In his 4-star review for AllMusic, Paul Simpson characterized Mystic Familiar as Deacon's return to "majestically arranged synth pop", characterizing its arrangements as "driving and full of excitement" and finding the album's lyrical themes of nature and inner peace "encouraging and empowering without relying on self-help clichés." [28] For Under the Radar , Scott Dransfield noted that Mystic Familiar is "far and away his most personal work yet", and concluded that "the best thing about Mystic Familiar is how the beautiful composition of the music reinforces the power of the lyrics' message." [29]
Deacon's remix of the Future Islands single "For Sure" premiered on January 19, 2021. [30]
In 2011, Deacon began to work more outside of the indie and pop music scenes and began working in the contemporary classical scene and film scoring. [31]
On January 20, 2011, Deacon and percussion quartet So Percussion premiered a new piece composed by Deacon titled "Ghostbuster Cook: Origin of the Riddler" at the Merkin Concert Hall in New York as part of the Ecstatic Music Festival. New York magazine listed the performance as one of the top 10 classical music performances of 2011. [32] "Ghostbuster Cook" was also performed at The Barbican for the Steve Reich Reverberations Festival, May 7, 2011. On February 3–4 the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony conducted by Edwin Outwater premiered Deacon's first orchestral works, [31] "Fiddlenist Rim" and "Song of the Winter Solstice for orchestra and electronics". [33]
On January 21, 2011 it was announced that Deacon would score the film Twixt by Francis Ford Coppola. On August 1, 2011 "Purse Hurdler", a composition for a 27-person percussion ensemble, was premiered by the So Percussion Summer Institute at Le Poisson Rouge in New York City. [34]
On March 2, 2012, Deacon performed with So Percussion at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto Canada. His compositions "Take A Deep Breath" and "Bottles" from "Ghostbuster Cook: Origin of the Riddler" were performed. [35]
On March 20, 2012, Deacon premiered a new composition for a chamber orchestra titled "An Opal Toad with Obsidian Eyes". The piece was premiered at the 2012 Ecstatic Music Festival and was performed by the Calder Quartet, NOW Ensemble and Deacon on electronics controlling a Disklavier player piano. The piece was met with positive reviews. [36]
Deacon made his Carnegie Hall debut on March 26, 2012, as part of the Carnegie Hall's American Mavericks series with So Percussion and Matmos. The concert was a tribute to composer John Cage to celebrate his 100th birthday. The program contained compositions by Cage and others influenced by the composer, including two works by Deacon, "Take A Deep Breath" and "Bottles" from "Ghostbuster Cook: Origin of the Riddler". This concert was also met with positive reviews. [37]
In July 2013, Deacon performed with the Kronos Quartet as part of their "Kronos at 40" series of concerts at Lincoln Center. [38] The quartet and Deacon performed the world premiere of his composition "Four Phases of Conflict" on the evening of July 28, 2013. [39]
New York City Ballet resident choreographer Justin Peck and Deacon collaborated on "The Times Are Racing", a ballet piece set to Deacon's four-part "USA I-IV" suite from his album America . "The Times Are Racing" had its premiere performance on January 26, 2017. [40]
Deacon collaborated with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall for an evening of performance and curation on January 17, 2019. The evening consisted of three sets: the orchestra presenting a selection of classic works co-curated by Deacon, including pieces by Erik Satie and Du Yun; a solo set by Deacon; and a collaborative set with Deacon and members of the orchestra playing expanded arrangements of Deacon's music. [41] This concert was named Best Concert of the year in Baltimore magazine's annual Best of Baltimore issue. [42]
Deacon's reputation was birthed by his live shows. [43] When playing solo he usually performs on floor level within the audience, his musical devices being set up on a low table, and surrounded by the crowd. In stark contrast to Deacon's electronic performances, the Bromst tour was with a 14-person ensemble of members of various Baltimore bands including So Percussion, Future Islands, and Chester Gwazda. He was accompanied by various acts including Nuclear Power Pants. This tour is also notable for the musicians' use of a vegetable oil powered bus.[ citation needed ]
In the summer of 2009, Dan Deacon went on tour with two other notable acts, Deerhunter, and No Age, on the "No Deachunter" tour. [44]
In the fall of 2009, Dan Deacon was forced to cancel the small remainder of his North American tour, which included shows at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York and Connecticut College in New London, Connecticut due to health complications involving a battle with acute sciatica, all of which were rescheduled in winter of 2010. [45]
For his America tour, Deacon created a smartphone app that synchronizes with the live show. It is usually used during the song "True Thrush". [46]
Deacon recorded the track "Drinking Out of Cups". In 2006, Liam Lynch created a video to accompany the piece. The compilation has been viewed more than 20 million times on YouTube. [47] As the video spread, rumors of what the video was and how it was made quickly began forming. One popular rumor is that it is a recording of someone on LSD locked in a closet. Deacon has stated numerous times that this is not true. [48]
He collaborated with Wham City Comedy, on Live Forever as You Are Now with Alan Resnick , an infomercial parody, created for Adult Swim and "Showbeast" the web series created and directed by Ben O'Brien. [49]
In September 2010, Deacon collaborated with video artist Jimmy Joe Roche at the Incubate festival in Tilburg, The Netherlands. While in residency there, Deacon and Roche worked on a new piece of video art. Material was shot at 't Schop, a farm in Hilvarenbeek, and in the area surrounding Tilburg. During the festival, the movie was shown at the farm before Deacon's performance.
Together with Jimmy Joe Roche and film critic Eric Allen Hatch, Dan Deacon curated and hosted the Gunky's Basement Film Series, a Maryland Film Festival series of films that are favorites of these friends and collaborators, including RoboCop , The Shining , and Something Wild . [50]
Deacon's score for Theo Anthony's 2017 documentary Rat Film was issued on October 13, 2017 as the inaugural release on the new Domino Soundtracks imprint. [51] During the recording of the score, Deacon experimented with the rodent subjects, placing rats onto a custom fiberglass table with sensors on each corner. "I thought it would be interesting to set up a group of theremins to be controlled by rats moving around an enclosure (the volumes and pitches would always be fluctuating based on where/how the rats moved)", he explained in a statement. "Using the data and patterns collected from the rat Theremin performance, as well as impulse data from recordings of rat brain activity, I began to compose the bulk of the score."
Deacon appears as himself in the 2014 film Song One .
In November 2018, Deacon released Time Trial, his original soundtrack score to Finlay Pretsell's cycling documentary. [52] Deacon's scores for both Rat Film and Time Trial were nominated for Best Original Score in the annual Cinema Eye Honors. [53]
Other films scored by Deacon include the feature documentaries Well Groomed [54] and And We Go Green, [55] and the ESPN 30 for 30 short Subject to Review. [56] Deacon also contributed original music to the score of Francis Ford Coppola's 2011 horror film Twixt , starring Val Kilmer.
Deacon scored three projects that premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival: Albert Birney and Kentucker Audley's narrative feature Strawberry Mansion , Theo Anthony's documentary feature All Light, Everywhere , and the documentary series Philly D.A. [57]
In 2021, Deacon also scored Jessica Kingdon's feature documentary Ascension , which premiered at the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival, winning both Best Documentary Feature and the Albert Maysles Award for Best New Documentary Director. [58] [59]
Deacon's scores for Ascension and All Light, Everywhere were both nominated for Outstanding Original Score at the 2022 Cinema Eye Honors, with Ascension taking home the prize in that category. [60]
Year | Artist | Release | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2016 | Matmos | Ultimate Care II | MIDI programming [61] |
2018 | Field Works | Initial Sounds | co-performer, song "Potentially Lahars" |
2018 | Ed Schrader's Music Beat | Riddles | programming and synths |
2019 | Chaunter | Dream Dynamics | arrangements, song "Goodbye" |
2021 | Future Islands | "For Sure (Dan Deacon Remix)" | Remixer |
Title | Year | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Ultimate Reality | 2007 | Jimmy Joe Roche | Experimental video-art piece |
Hilvarenbeek | 2010 | Dan Deacon and Jimmy Joe Roche | Experimental narrative short film |
Twixt (with Osvaldo Golijov) | 2011 | Francis Ford Coppola | Feature film |
Unedited Footage of a Bear | 2014 | Alan Resnick and Ben O'Brien | Short film |
Rat Film | 2016 | Theo Anthony | Experimental documentary feature film |
Growing Girl | 2017 | Marnie Ellen Hertzler | Documentary short film |
Time Trial | 2017 | Finlay Pretsell | Documentary feature film |
Hi I Need to Be Loved | 2018 | Marnie Ellen Hertzler | Documentary short film |
Well Groomed | 2019 | Rebecca Stern | Documentary feature film |
Skin of Man | 2019 | Jimmy Joe Roche | Short film |
And We Go Green | 2019 | Fisher Stevens and Malcolm Venville | Documentary feature film |
Subject to Review | 2019 | Theo Anthony | Documentary short film for ESPN 30 for 30 |
Strawberry Mansion | 2021 | Albert Birney and Kentucker Audley | Narrative feature film |
All Light, Everywhere | 2021 | Theo Anthony | Experimental documentary feature film |
Ascension | 2021 | Jessica Kingdon | Documentary feature film |
Hustle | 2022 | Jeremiah Zagar | Feature film |
Venom: The Last Dance | 2024 | Kelly Marcel | Feature film |
Title | Year | Network |
---|---|---|
Philly D.A. | 2021 | PBS Independent Lens |
Wedding Season | 2022 | Star on Disney+ |
Sex Diaries | 2022 | HBO |
The Changeling | 2023 | Apple TV+ |
Perfect Wife: The Mysterious Disappearance of Sherri Papini | 2024 | Hulu |
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources .(January 2020) |
Saturday Night Fever is the soundtrack album from the 1977 film Saturday Night Fever starring John Travolta. The soundtrack was released on November 15, 1977 by RSO Records. Prior to the release of Thriller by Michael Jackson, Saturday Night Fever was the best-selling album in music history, and still ranks among the best-selling soundtrack albums worldwide, with sales figures of over 40 million copies.
Jonathan Julian Hopkins is an English musician and producer who writes and performs electronic music. He began his career playing keyboards for Imogen Heap, and has produced but also contributed to albums by Brian Eno, Coldplay, David Holmes and others.
Christopher Stephen Clark is a British electronic musician, performing under the mononym Clark. He has produced music for his own albums, as well as music for television, films and video games, having composed scores for award-winning contemporary dance and BAFTA nominated TV series. His records have been released by Warp Records, Deutsche Grammophon and his own label Throttle Records.
Carpark Records is an independent record label based in Washington, D.C.
Spiderman of the Rings is the first studio album by the American electronic musician Dan Deacon, released by Carpark Records on May 8, 2007. The album was released on white vinyl by Wildfire Wildfire Records.
Dirty Projectors is an American indie rock band from Brooklyn, New York, formed in 2002. The band is the project of singer-songwriter David Longstreth, who has served as the band's sole constant member throughout numerous line-up changes. The band's current line-up consists of Longstreth, alongside Mike Daniel Johnson (drums), Maia Friedman, Felicia Douglass and Olga Bell.
"Used to Be" is a song by American dream pop band Beach House from their third studio album, Teen Dream. It was written by lead vocalist and keyboardist Victoria Legrand and guitarist Alex Scally and produced by them along with Chris Coady. The song was released on October 21, 2008 as the album's lead single and features a B-side of a different version of "Apple Orchard", a song which featured on their self-titled debut album.
Luke Abbott is an English electronic music producer from Norwich, Norfolk. He records and performs extensively under his own name, under the alias Earlham Mystics, and as one-third of the electronic jazz group Szun Waves. His work has been described as "left-field techno and kraut-infused electro" but also draws on more esoteric elements of improvisation, "psychedelic, filtered beats and slow-evolving synths".
Bromst is the second studio album by the American electronic musician Dan Deacon. It was released on March 24, 2009.
Dustin Wong is an American guitarist formerly active in the art-rock band Ponytail and a former member of the experimental guitar duo Ecstatic Sunshine.
Heartland is the third full-length album by Canadian indie rock artist Owen Pallett, released January 12, 2010 on Domino Records. It's the first of Pallett's records to be released under their own name. Since the album was their first to be released in Japan, they wished to avoid generating confusion with the Final Fantasy video games from Square Enix, and to avoid infringing on any trademarks. Pallett stated that their previous albums will be repackaged and reissued under their own name at some point.
Animal Collective is an American experimental pop band formed in Baltimore, Maryland. Its members consist of Avey Tare, Panda Bear, Geologist, and Deakin. The band's work is characterized by an eclectic exploration of styles, including psychedelia, freak folk, noise, and electronica, with the use of elements such as loops, drones, sampling, vocal harmonies, and sound collage. AllMusic's Fred Thomas suggests that the group "defined the face of independent experimental rock during the 2000s and 2010s."
America is the third studio album by American electronic musician Dan Deacon, released August 27, 2012, on Domino Records. The album cover is a photo of Lake Placid in the US state of New York.
"Dan Deacon: U.S.A." is the first animated television special of the American anthology series Off the Air. The special was edited and directed by creator and executive producer Dave Hughes. The episode incorporates surreal footage of landscapes in the United States, with music by Dan Deacon from the album America. The special was commissioned by Williams Street Records as part of the Adult Swim 2013 Singles Program. The episode coincided with the release of another track by Deacon entitled "Why Am I on This Cloud?", featuring samples from other Adult Swim programming.
Wham City is an art and performance collective based in Baltimore, Maryland. Members of Wham City include musicians Dan Deacon and Ed Schrader, visual artists Jimmy Joe Roche, Peter Ryan O'Connell, Mason Ross, Adam Endres, Dina Kelberman, April Camlin, Connor M. Kizer, Robby Rackleff, Cricket Arrison, Alan Resnick and Ben O'Brien.
Ed Schrader's Music Beat is an American two piece rock duo of Ed Schrader and Devlin Rice from Baltimore, Maryland. According to The Boston Hassle, the duo has "a gas pedal/brake pedal sonic narrative, careening without warning between cross-eyed tantrums and sultry, eyebrow-cocked croons." They have released albums on Infinity Cat Recordings, Load Records, Upset The Rhythm, and Famous Class Records. Touring with bands such as Future Islands, Ceremony, and Wye Oak, the duo has been described as "one of contemporary punk’s best examples of testing the possibilities" and has performed across the U.S. and Europe.
Gliss Riffer is the fourth studio album by American electronic musician Dan Deacon. It was released on February 24, 2015, on Domino Records.
Alexander Giannascoli, better known by his stage names Alex G or, formerly, (Sandy) Alex G, is an American musician, producer, and singer-songwriter. He started his career playing in multiple local bands before he decided to pursue his own music career as a soloist. At 18, he began to record his own music and released his first album under the name Sandy in 2010. DIY self-releases on Bandcamp and began building up an audience with his label debut, DSU (2014), released on Orchid Tapes to critical acclaim from various publications. He later signed with Lucky Number, who reissued his earlier releases, Rules and Trick (2012).
Riddles is the third studio album by American rock duo Ed Schrader's Music Beat. The album features the single "Dunce". The album was produced and co-written by electronic-pop musician Dan Deacon.
Mystic Familiar is the fifth studio album by the American electronic musician Dan Deacon.