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*He was with [[Jad Fair]] when arrested for drawing the [[Jesus fish]] inside the [[Statue of Liberty]].
*He was with [[Jad Fair]] when arrested for drawing the [[Jesus fish]] inside the [[Statue of Liberty]].
*In December 2005 Johnston's song, "McDonald's on the brain", was published in (translated) Hebrew in ''[[Maayan Magazine]]'' for poetry and art.
*In December 2005 Johnston's song, "McDonald's on the brain", was published in (translated) Hebrew in ''[[Maayan Magazine]]'' for poetry and art.
*He refused to sign with [[Elektra Records]] because during a psychotic phase of his illness accompanied by religious preoccupation, he claimed one of their bands, [[Metallica]], were under the control of Satan. Johnston used a passage of Metallica lyrics in the song "Melody" on the Lucky Sperms collaboration with [[Jad Fair]] and [[Chris Bultman]].
*[[Jesse Lacey]], lead singer of the band [[Brand New]], stated in a UK radio interview with BBC Radio 1 that the title of their album [[The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me]] is taken from a conversation Lacey was having with a friend about Johnston.
*[[Jesse Lacey]], lead singer of the band [[Brand New]], stated in a UK radio interview with BBC Radio 1 that the title of their album [[The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me]] is taken from a conversation Lacey was having with a friend about Johnston.
*[[Hospital Music]] - the most recent album by Canadian musician [[Matthew Good]] - features a cover of Johnston's track "True Love WIll Find You In The End".
*[[Hospital Music]] - the most recent album by Canadian musician [[Matthew Good]] - features a cover of Johnston's track "True Love WIll Find You In The End".

Revision as of 10:58, 22 September 2007

Template:Infobox musical artist 2

Daniel Dale Johnston (b. January 22, 1961) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and artist. Johnston was the subject of the 2005 documentary The Devil and Daniel Johnston. He currently lives in a house adjacent to his parents' home in Waller, Texas.

Johnston has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder [1]. His songs are often called "painfully direct," and tend to display a blend of childlike naïveté with darker, "spooky" themes. Johnston's earliest recordings present him singing in a high register. However, throughout the nineties his voice acquired a new character and tone and an altogether different style of delivery and diction. This may have been inspired by a mixture of the damage done by smoking, tooth loss and medication prescribed to control his disorder. His performances often seem faltering or uncertain; one critic writes that Johnston's recordings range from "spotty to brilliant."[2]

Biography

Early life

Johnston was born in Palm Springs, California and grew up in the northern panhandle of Chester, West Virginia between Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Johnston began recording what he thought of as John Lennon- and Beatles-inspired music in the late 1970s on a $59 Sanyo monaural Boombox, singing and playing piano and chord organ. He gave tapes of his music to anyone who would take them and created the comic book-inspired art that usually accompanied his recordings.

His early songs established a number of themes that would persist through Johnston's career: unrequited love, Casper the Friendly Ghost, and comic book superheroes, especially Captain America and Jack Kirby's other works. Many of Johnston's songs and art reveal a propensity to proselytize for his conception of Christianity, warning about the devil, and a fixation on the number 9.

Johnston spent his first year away from home at Abilene Christian University, where his bipolar disorder became more evident and problematic. He then left West Texas and attended the East Liverpool branch of Kent State University, which was closer to his hometown. Many of Johnston's songs throughout the years have dealt with his unrequited love for a woman named Laurie Allen. For Johnston, Laurie quickly assumed the role of the idealized female muse. When she married an undertaker, Johnston felt prompted to write lyrics in which the Laurie figure becomes strongly associated with the imagery of death in addition to her original role as a muse. Laurie Allen has since divorced and filmmaker Jeff Feuerzeig arranged a meeting between Allen and Johnston, which is documented in a special feature on the DVD of The Devil and Daniel Johnston.

He suffers from Type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Music career

Johnston gained a cult following in Austin, Texas. A 1985 MTV special on Austin brought Johnston wider attention, and a number of record stores outside Texas began selling his cassettes. His songs have been covered by more than 150 artists worldwide.

In 1990, he played at South By Southwest, a music festival in Austin, Texas. On the way back to West Virginia on a small, private plane piloted by his father, Johnston had a manic episode and wrestled control of the plane away from his father, removing the key from the ignition and throwing it out of the plane. His father, a World War II fighter pilot, managed to successfully crash-land the plane in a wooded area. Although the plane was destroyed, Johnston and his father emerged unharmed. As a result of this episode, Johnston was involuntarily committed to a mental hospital.

In 1991, Johnston was able to air his music on a radio show while being hospitalized at a West Virginia mental hospital. While hospitalized, Johnston sent requests to his manager to have Yoko Ono produce his music and to contact Mountain Dew about the possibility of becoming the soft drink's spokesman. Johnston wrote a song praising Mountain Dew during this hospitalisation, in which he claimed to have been locked up for being "crazy about Mountain Dew."

His music has been acclaimed by David Bowie, Yo La Tengo, Sonic Youth, Eddie Vedder, Beck, Spiritualized, The Flaming Lips, Bright Eyes, and Matt Groening. Kurt Cobain praised Johnston's work, and often wore a tee shirt with a Johnston illustration and a caption reading, "Hi How Are You?"

In 1994, Johnston released Fun on Atlantic Records, his only major-label release. The record was produced by Paul Leary of Butthole Surfers, a group that had long supported Johnston, even inviting him to open a number of concerts for them. The record sold a little over 6,000 copies and Johnston was dropped by the label.

His disorder also cost him a contract with Elektra Records. Johnston was on the verge of signing a deal with Elektra VP of A&R Terry Tolkin, which included a generous advance and a clause that Johnston would not have to tour or make music videos. But he refused to sign with the label during a psychotic phase accompanied by religious preoccupation, claiming one of Elektra's bands, Metallica, was under the control of Satan. Interestingly, Johnston used a passage of Metallica lyrics in the song "Melody" on the Lucky Sperms collaboration with Jad Fair and Chris Bultman.

In 1995, Johnston contributed two songs to the soundtrack for Larry Clark's controversial film Kids, produced by Folk Implosion and Sebadoh's frontman, Lou Barlow.

Johnston covered Schoolhouse Rock!'s well-known "Unpack Your Adjectives" for a compilation of the popular education songs called Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks in 1996.

File:Hi,HowAreYou 21st&Guadalupe.jpg
The famous "Hi, How Are You?" mural in Austin, Texas

In 2005, Texas-based theater company Infernal Bridegroom Productions received a Multi-Arts Production/MAP Fund grant [3] to work with Johnston to create a rock opera based on his music, titled Speeding Motorcycle.

He often performs with fellow Waller residents Jason and Bridget Nightmare as Danny and the Nightmares.

Art career

In 1993, Johnston painted a mural of the "Hi, How Are You?" frog, also known as Jeremiah the Innocent after the Three Dog Night song, on the side of the Austin Sound Exchange music store. The site was converted into a Baja Fresh franchise in 2004. Although initial plans called for the mural to be torn down, public outcry persuaded restaurant owner John Oudt to let the mural stay, at a price of $50,000 in additional costs and lost revenue. The Baja Fresh has since closed and the space has remained vacant for several months as of July 2007.

Johnston's drawings were featured in the 2006 Whitney Biennial. His artwork is shown in galleries around the world, including exhibits in London's Aquarium Gallery (April 28-May 20, 2006) and New York's Clementine Gallery (March 16-April 15, 2006).

Recent news

The Devil and Daniel Johnston (2005) is a documentary by Jeff Feuerzeig about Johnston's life and music, and won the Director's Award at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. It is now available on DVD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. As shown on the DVD's extra features, at a screening of the film, Johnston reunited with Laurie for the first time in decades and proposed. Her response was not recorded.

In 2006, Johnston collaborated with Osaka Popstar, supplying backing vocals on their upcoming album. They also covered his song "Wicked World."

In April 2006, Filter Magazine reported that the Johnston family's Eternal Yip Eye Music label would soon release Johnston's first greatest hits compilation, Welcome to My World. [4]

In May and June 2006, Houston-based theater group Infernal Bridegroom Productions created and performed the rock opera Speeding Motorcycle, based on Johnston's music and in partial collaboration with Johnston; his late-2005 health crisis limited his input, however.

In 2006 Johnston appeared as the musical guest on The Henry Rollins Show and performed "Mask" and "Care Less" (the latter was exclusive to the internet). Both can be viewed in the video section of the IFC page for the show.[5]

Johnston told the following joke during his show at the 2007 South by Southwest music festival: "I heard the Jews are having a pajama party… at the concentration camp." He drew criticism after this for perceived insensitivity towards Jews.[6]

Daniel Johnston played the All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Minehead, Somerset England in May 2007. His performance was warmly received and he played two extra sets and reprised 'Speeding Motorcycle' with Yo La Tengo.

Trivia

Discography

  • Songs of Pain (Stress Records cassette, 1981)
  • Don't Be Scared (Stress Records cassette, 1982)
  • The What of Whom (Stress Records cassette, 1982)
  • More Songs of Pain (Stress Records cassette, 1983)
  • Yip/Jump Music (Stress Records cassette, 1983; CD issued on Homestead, 1989)
  • Hi, How Are You (Stress Records cassette, 1983; issued with Continued Story on Homestead, 1989)
  • Retired Boxer (Stress Records cassette, 1984)
  • Respect (Stress Records cassette, 1985; 10" on Spain's Munster label)
  • Continued Story with Texas Instruments (Stress Records cassette, 1985; reissued with Hi, How Are You on Homestead, 1989)
  • A Texas Trip (Caroline Records, 2 Songs, 1987)
  • Merry Christmas (Stress Records cassette, 1988)
  • Live at South by Southwest (Stress Records cassette, 1990)
  • 1990 (Shimmy Disc, 1990)
  • Artistic Vice (Shimmy Disc, 1991)
  • Frankenstein Love recorded live in 1992 (Stress Records cassette, 2000)
  • Fun (Atlantic, 1994)
  • Why Me recorded live in Berlin in 1999 (Trikont, 2000)
  • Rejected Unknown (Gammon Records/Pickled Egg Records, 2001)
  • Fear Yourself with Mark Linkous (Gammon Records, 2003)
  • Lost and Found (Sketchbook Records, UK, 2006)

EPs and singles:

  • Casper The Friendly Ghost (1988)
  • The River Of No Return (1991)
  • Big Big World recorded 1986 (Seminal Twang, UK, 1991)
  • Laurie (Seminal Twang, UK, 1992)
  • Happy Time (1994)
  • Dream Scream (Pickled Egg Records, 1998)
  • Impossible Love (2001)
  • Sinning Is Easy (Pickled Egg Records, 2002)
  • Mountain Top (Rough Trade, 2003)
  • Fish (Sketchbook Records, UK, 2003)

Side Projects/Collaborations:

  • with Jad Fair: It's Spooky (50 Skidillion Watts, 1989; reissued on Jagjaguwar, 2001)
  • with Yo La Tengo: Speeding Motorcycle single (1990)
  • Danny and the Nightmares (Eternal Yip Eye Music, 1999)
  • with Ron English and Jack Medicine: Hyperjinx Tricycle (Important Records, 2000)
  • with Chris Bultman and Jad Fair as The Lucky Sperms: Somewhat Humorous (Jagjaguwar, 2001)
  • Danny and the Nightmares: Natzi single (2001)
  • with Hyperjinx Tricycle: Long Lost Love single (2002)
  • with Okkervil River: Happy Hearts off the album Don't Fall in Love with Everyone You See(Jagjaguwar, 2002)
  • with Hyperjinx Tricycle: Alien Mind Control 3" CD (Important Records, 2003)
  • Danny and the Nightmares: The End Is Near Again (Cool Beans, 2003)
  • with Rule of Thirds: "Rin Tin Soldier" (Eternal Yip Eye Music, 2003)
  • Danny and the Nightmares: Freak Brain (Sympathy Records, 2005)
  • with Jack Medicine: The Electric Ghosts (Important Records, 2006)
  • Danny and the Nightmares: The Death of Satan (Unreleased, 2007)

Compilations and tribute albums:

  • The Lost Recordings (Stress Records, 1983) cassette
  • The Lost Recordings II (Stress Records, 1983) cassette
  • Please Don't Feed The Ego (Eternal Yip Eye Music, 1994)
  • Dead Dog's Eyeball by Kathy McCarty (1994)
  • Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks - contributed "Unpack Your Adjectives" (1996)
  • The Early Recordings of Daniel Johnston Volume 1 (Dualtone, 2003) - Reissue of Songs of Pain and More Songs of Pain
  • The Late Great Daniel Johnston: Discovered Covered (Gammon Records, 2004) - Tribute album along with disc of original versions plus one new song
  • White Magic: From The Cassette Archives 1979-1989 (Eternal Yip Eye Music, 2004)
  • Welcome To My World (Eternal Yip Eye Music, 2006)

Unknown:

DEVIL TOWN

References

  1. ^ Zacharek, Stephanie (2006-03-31). ""The Devil and Daniel Johnston"". Salon.com. Retrieved 2007-02-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Kristin Sage Rockermann (2002-01-01). "Interview: Daniel Johnston". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2007-02-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ http://www.mapfund.org/grant_59.html
  4. ^ http://www.filter-mag.com/news/interior.3145.html
  5. ^ http://henryrollins.ifc.com
  6. ^ http://www.indyweekblogs.com/scan/sxsw07/sxsw07-the-nazi-and-daniel-johnston/

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