Dan Wilson (musician)
Daniel Dodd Wilson (born May 20, 1961) is an American musician, singer, songwriter, producer, and visual artist. His songwriting resume includes "Closing Time", which he wrote for his band, Semisonic, "Not Ready to Make Nice" (co-written with the The Chicks) and "Someone like You" (co-written with Adele). He earned a Grammy nomination for "Closing Time" (Best Rock Song) and won Grammys for Song of the Year ("Not Ready to Make Nice" in 2007) and Album of the Year (which he won in 2012 as one of the producers of Adele's 21).
Dan Wilson | |
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Dan Wilson performing in 2008 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Daniel Dodd Wilson[1] |
Born | St. Louis Park, Minnesota, U.S. | May 20, 1961
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
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Instruments |
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Labels | Ballroom Music |
Associated acts | |
Website | danwilsonmusic |
In addition to being the leader of Semisonic, Wilson has released several solo recordings, including the 2017 release Re-Covered. He was also a member of the Minneapolis psychedelic rock band Trip Shakespeare.[2]
Early life and education
Wilson is a native of St. Louis Park, Minnesota. Wilson attended Harvard University, where he studied visual arts with a focus on printmaking[3] and from which he graduated B.A. summa cum laude in Visual and Environmental Studies in 1983,[4] while he resided in Dunster House. Wilson is an accomplished artist, and won the first Louis Sudler Prize for Outstanding Artistic Talent and Achievement in 1983.[5] While in college, he began collaborating with his brother, singer-songwriter Matt Wilson, who also attended Harvard College. The Wilson brothers played in two bands, Animal Dance and the Love Monsters. After college, Wilson pursued his interest in drawing and painting, first in San Francisco and then in Minneapolis.
Career
Early career
In 1987, Wilson joined the Minneapolis psychedelic band, Trip Shakespeare, which Matt Wilson had founded with bassist John Munson and drummer Elaine Harris. The original three members had already released one record, Applehead Man, and now as a quartet, with Wilson on guitar, piano, sharing lead vocal duties with Matt Wilson—with whom Wilson also co-wrote many of the songs—and Munson, the band released three more albums (Are You Shakespearienced?, 1988, Gark Records; Across the Universe, 1990, A&M Records; Lulu, 1991, A&M Records) and one EP (Volt, 1992, Twin Tone).
Since Trip Shakespeare's breakup in 1992, Wilson has continued to collaborate with his brother, including the release of two live albums (Minneapolis 2010 and Minneapolis 2013).
With Semisonic
After Trip Shakespeare's breakup in 1992, Wilson and Munson joined with drummer Jacob Slichter to form Pleasure, a trio that was later renamed Semisonic. Semisonic released one EP, three full-length albums, and one live album.
The band's first album, Great Divide, received critical acclaim. David Fricke wrote in a year-end Rolling Stone article on the notable albums of 1996, "Great Divide is that rare '96 beast, a record of simple but sparkling modern pop, rattling with power-trio vitality." It was their 1998 release, Feeling Strangely Fine, however, that brought the band to widespread national and then international attention and success. Powered by Wilson's songs "Closing Time", which was a number-one hit on the Modern Rock charts for thirteen weeks in the spring and summer of 1998, the follow-up single "Singing in My Sleep", and "Secret Smile", a breakthrough hit for the band internationally, Feeling Strangely Fine attained platinum sales status in the U.S. and U.K. "Closing Time" received a 1999 Grammy nomination for Best Rock Song[6] and has become an enduring pop-culture reference point for the late 1990s. It was a focal point of the plot and soundtrack of the 2011 film Friends with Benefits.
Semisonic's third album, All About Chemistry, was released in 2001, and featured Wilson's song "Chemistry", the album's first single, and also included "One True Love", a song Wilson co-wrote with Carole King.
Semisonic stopped touring in August 2001 but continued to perform on occasion. Slichter's memoir, So You Wanna Be a Rock & Roll Star, provides a detailed account of the band's adventures and misadventures in the music business.
On June 26, 2020, Semisonic released their first new single in nearly 20 years titled "You're Not Alone", and announced that the release of an EP scheduled for September 18, 2020
Free Life
Wilson's solo debut, Free Life, was released in 2007 by American Recordings. Produced with Rick Rubin, Free Life was recorded in Minneapolis and Los Angeles and includes performances by Tracy Bonham, Sheryl Crow, Jason Lader, Gary Louris, Natalie Maines, Benmont Tench, and a number of Minneapolis-based musicians including multi-instrumentalist and frequent Semisonic sideman Ken Chastain, Eric Fawcett, John Hermanson, Joanna James, Mason Jennings, Steve Rhoem, Joe Savage, as well as Wilson's Semisonic bandmates Munson and Slichter.
Free Life helped establish Wilson's reputation as a songwriter, with The A.V. Club writing, "the star of the show here is Wilson's remarkable instinct for creating gorgeous songs, and his unabashed, obvious joy in doing so. For anyone worried that songcraft is an endangered species, Free Life should ease those fears."[7]
Love Without Fear
Wilson's second solo album, Love Without Fear, was released on April 15, 2014 and includes performances by Sara Bareilles, Missy Higgins, Lissie, Natalie Maines, Blake Mills, Sara Watkins, and Sean Watkins. The first recording from Love Without Fear, "Disappearing" (with a cover of Neil Young's "Out on the Weekend" included as a b-side) was released on November 7, 2013 and was the debut release of the new singles label, Canvasclub.
In describing the album, Wilson said, "The songs are about being left alone, not wanting to lose someone, about desperately wishing for connection and togetherness. The sound of the record lives at the intersection of Americana and Beatles- influenced rock and roll. A little bit of twang and a lot of cinematic emotion."[8] The album received largely favourable reviews emphasizing Wilson's reputation as a songwriter.[9][10][11][12] "Dan Wilson's career is proof positive that smart, elegant songwriting has a place in music… [Love Without Fear] is a lovely amalgamation of chamber rock, gentle country, gooey '70s pop and snappy soul."[13]
Re-Covered
Wilson's third solo studio album, Re-Covered, was released on August 4, 2017. The album is a collection of reinterpretations of songs Wilson wrote for other artists, both big hits and "songs that I always wished were big hits, but weren't." The album includes "Someone Like You" (written with Adele), "Not Ready To Make Nice" (written with Dixie Chicks), "Home" (written with Dierks Bentley and Brett Beavers), and "When The Stars Come Out" (written with Chris Stapleton).[14]
Singles
In September 2018 Wilson announced that he would begin releasing new music that Fall. Rather than organizing the new songs into an album, he would instead release them over time as monthly singles. According to Wilson, "I fell in love with the idea of just letting songs out into the world when they happen."[15] "I don't have anything against making an album. If I do 15 or 20 of these I would love the idea of packaging them together and calling it an album. I think that'd be fantastic, but I don't really have that in my mind. I'm just trying to be free."[16]
Words and Music by Dan Wilson
Wilson's discoveries as a solo artist and collaborator with other artists are the subject of "Words and Music by Dan Wilson", solo concerts in which he performs some of his songs and describes the songs' various inspirations or the insights that occasioned their composition. "Words and Music by Dan Wilson" has come to Hotel Cafe, Room 5 and Largo in Los Angeles, Joe's Pub and City Winery in New York, World Cafe Live in Philadelphia, Jammin' Java in DC, Rams Head in Annapolis, The Cedar Cultural Center in Minneapolis, the Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul,[17] Schubas Tavern in Chicago, Berklee College of Music's Red Room at Cafe 939 in Boston, and the Red Barn concert series in Northfield, MN. Wilson has also presented Words & Music workshops at the 2012 ASCAP expo, UCLA's Herb Alpert School of Music, and USC's Thornton School of Music.[18]
Wilson's thoughts about songwriting and the creative process are also captured in his series, Words & Music in Six Seconds, which was originally launched on Vine and is now regularly posted on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. From American Songwriter, "In his short videos, Wilson provides insightful quips about common songwriting insecurities, methodology, personal writing quirks, and various other tips for writing your best."[19]
As a songwriter and producer
As a songwriter and producer, Wilson has collaborated with a number of artists. Two of these collaborations have earned him Grammy Awards.
A number of artists have described Wilson's ability to help put their feelings and ideas into song. Speaking of her experience of working with him, Pink said, in an online interview, "He is brilliant, and he's a thoughtful songwriter. And he's a song crafter . . . like old-school. He crafts songs and he thinks about them. And I learned a lot from working with him." In describing her co-writing with Wilson, Adele said, "Dan had me on my hands and knees, crying my eyes out - there's just something about him that made me completely open up as a composer."[20]
Taking the Long Way – The Dixie Chicks
Wilson co-wrote six of the songs on the Dixie Chicks multiple-Grammy-winning album Taking the Long Way, including the title song and "Not Ready to Make Nice", which earned Wilson and the Dixie Chicks the 2007 Grammy for Song of the Year. In the 2006 film Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and Sing, Wilson speaks on camera about his experience as a co-writer on this album, especially in regard to helping the Dixie Chicks make an artistic response to their rejection by radio and a large swath of their fans in the wake of the band's statements about President Bush and the Iraq War.
One of the songs he co-wrote for this album, "Easy Silence", appears on Free Life, with Dixie Chicks singer Natalie Maines singing harmonies.
21 – Adele
Wilson co-wrote three of the songs on Adele's multiple-Grammy-winning 21, "Don't You Remember", "One and Only", and, most notably, "Someone Like You", which became a number one hit in the US, UK, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand was a top ten hit around the globe. As a producer of this track, on which he also played piano, Wilson shared in the 2012 Grammy Award for Album of the Year.
In an interview with American Songwriter, Wilson recounted the writing and recording of "Someone Like You":
- The recording on the album was intended as a demo. I was thinking, "Oh, they're going to make a big version of this, strings and angelic choirs, like a big Chrissie Hynde power-ballad." But by the end of the first day, the demo was sounding lovely, and very affecting, but it was only half-written, there were no words on the second verse or the bridge as I remember. Adele came to the studio the next day and said, "I played it for my manager and me Mum." I was a little nervous about this because I don't like people to hear works-in-progress. I asked her what they thought of the song. "My manager loves it and me Mum cried."
"Someone Like You" won the 2012 Grammy for Best Pop Solo Performance, and as she accepted the award, Adele said, "I want to thank Dan Wilson, who wrote this song with me. My life changed when I wrote this song and I felt it before anyone even heard it."
"Someone Like You" was the most downloaded single of all time in the UK and was voted third most favourite single of the last 60 years in the UK.[21]
As a visual artist
Wilson's career as a painter, illustrator, and calligrapher is less widely known, but his artwork has often intersected with his music career. He was represented by Thomas Barry Fine Arts in Minneapolis, and his works are included in numerous private and corporate collections.
Wilson's paintings are featured on the artwork for two of Trip Shakespeare's albums, Are You Shakespearienced? and Lulu, as well as on the cover of his first solo album, Free Life.
Wilson created all of the artwork for his 2014 album Love Without Fear. Most notably, a hand illustrated 24-page hardcover Deluxe Album Book/CD. The package includes Wilson's own calligraphy, sketches, and handwritten lyrics for each song on the album. The official lyric videos for his singles from the album, "Disappearing" and "A Song Can Be About Anything" are also made entirely from his own illustrations.
At his "Words and Music by Dan Wilson" shows, audience members receive illuminated set lists that are hand illustrated by Wilson. One of these set lists was featured on NPR's blog All Songs Considered.
Wilson's calligraphy and illustrations are featured in his Tumblr series, "DW's Sketchbook" and his musical cartoons have been featured in The Wall Street Journal's Speakeasy Blog.[22]
Personal life
Wilson is married to Diane Espaldon. Wilson and his wife were contemporaries at Harvard University, where he studied visual arts and she studied government.[4] Wilson's wife subsequently earned a M.A. from School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University. Together, they have one biological daughter, Corazon ("Coco") (b. 1997), who was born prematurely and has disabilities and for whom "Closing Time" was written before her birth,[23] and Lily (b. 2007), who was adopted at age two from the Philippines.
Discography
Singles
- 2020 "Try Love"
- 2020 "The Real Question"
- 2020 "Red Light"
- 2020 "Superfan"
- 2020 "Eventually"
- 2019 "Last December"
- 2019 "Sunshine"
- 2019 "Too Much ii"
- 2019 "A Modest Proposal"
- 2019 "The Rules"
- 2019 "Fly Safe"
- 2018 "Are You Lonely Tonight, Mrs. Claus?"
- 2018 "Christmassy"
- 2018 "Uncanny Valley"
- 2018 "We Ain't Telling"
- 2016 "Yoko"
- 2015 "The Hottest Christmas Eve Ever"
- 2013 "Disappearing"
Studio albums
- 2017 Re-Covered
- 2014 Love Without Fear
- 2008 Be Free EP digital release
- 2007 Free Life
Live albums
- 2009 Dan Wilson Live at the Pantages – A 2-CD document of Dan Wilson's concert at Minneapolis' Pantages Theater on December 13, 2008.[24]
- 2008 Live at the Electric Fetus
- 2001 DW Live @ the CCC
- 1998 Dan Wilson Live @ Bryant Lake Bowl
with Semisonic
- 2020 You're Not Alone (EP)
- 2018 Feeling Strangely Fine (20th Anniversary Reissue)
- 2003 One Night at First Avenue (live)
- 2001 All About Chemistry
- 1998 Feeling Strangely Fine
- 1996 Great Divide
- 1995 Pleasure EP (EP)
- 1993 Pleasure
Dan and Matt Wilson
Trip Shakespeare
- 1992 Volt (EP)
- 1991 Lulu
- 1990 Across the Universe
- 1989 Are You Shakespearienced?
The Love Monsters
- 1983 Kiss Away The Tears (7")
Film, TV, and Soundtracks (as a performer)
- 2013 Absolutely Cuckoo: Minnesota covers the 69 Love Songs – "The Things We Did and Didn't Do"
- 2011 Minnesota Remembers Vic Chesnutt – "Soft Picasso"
- 2010 Dear John Soundtrack – "You Take My Troubles Away" (with Rachael Yamagata)
- 2009 All About Steve Soundtrack – "Sugar"
- 2006 For New Orleans – "I Can't Hold You"
- 2002 For the Kids – "Willie The King"
- 2002 Maybe This Christmas – "What A Year for a New Year"
- 2001 Summer Catch Soundtrack – Semisonic's "Over My Head"
- 1999 American Pie Soundtrack - "Good Morning Baby"
- 1999 Together in Concert: Live, Bic Runga Featuring Dan Wilson
- 1999 Friends Again Soundtrack – Semisonic's "Delicious"
- 1999 10 Things I Hate About You Soundtrack – Semisonic's "FNT"
- 1999 Never Been Kissed Soundtrack – Semisonic's "Never You Mind"
- 1999 For The Love of the Game Soundtrack – Semisonic's "For The Love of the Game"
- 1996 The Long Kiss Goodnight Soundtrack – Semisonic's "FNT"
Film and Soundtracks (as a writer and producer)
- 2019 Big Little Lies (TV series) Season 2 Soundtrack – "That Was Yesterday" (Leon Bridges)
- 2014 The Fault In Our Stars Soundtrack – "Tee Shirt" and "Best Shot" (Birdy)
- 2013 Spark: A Burning Man Story Soundtrack – "We Ride" (Missy Higgins)
- 2013 Safe Haven Soundtrack – "We Both Know" (Colbie Caillat & Gavin DeGraw)
- 2010 The Twilight Saga: Eclipse Soundtrack – "Ours" (The Bravery)
- 2010 The Kid Soundtrack – "Boy" (KT Tunstall)
Writing and producing credits
Year | Artist | Credit | Title |
---|---|---|---|
2020 | Andrea Russett | Writer | "Darkest Hour" |
LANY | Writer | "Nobody Else" | |
Joshua Speers | Writer | "Thunder Blanket" | |
JoJo | Writer | "In Your Room" | |
Briston Maroney | Writer | "Deep Sea Diver" | |
Ricky Reed | Writer | "Better" feat. Leon Bridges and Kiana Ledé | |
Amy Allen | Writer / Producer | "Queen of Silver Linings" | |
The Chicks | Writer | "March March" | |
Leon Bridges | Writer | "Sweeter" | |
Alec Benjamin | Writer | "Six Feet Apart" | |
Phantogram | Writer | "Glowing" | |
"Gaunt Kids" | |||
"Love Me Now" | |||
Gunnar Gehl | Writer | "For Your Love" | |
2019 | Yoshi Flower | Writer | "More" |
Celine Dion | Writer / Producer | "Lovers Never Die" | |
Harper Finn | Writer | "Good For Me" | |
JoJo | Writer | "Sabotage" feat. CHIKA | |
Mondo Cozmo | Writer | "Come On" | |
Donna Missal | Writer | "You Burned Me" | |
Leon Bridges | Writer / Producer | "That Was Yesterday" | |
Noah Kahan | Writer | "Busyhead" | |
James Bay | Writer / Producer | "Bad" - single | |
Rhye | Writer / Producer | "Needed" - single | |
Mike Posner | Writer | "Song About You" - lead single | |
"Move On" - single | |||
2018 | Alec Benjamin | Writer | "Water Fountain" |
"Gotta Be a Reason" | |||
John Legend | Writer | "Waiting For Christmas" | |
Lukas Graham | Writer | "You're Not The Only One (Redemption Song)" | |
Josh Groban | Writer | "You Have No Idea" | |
Steve Perry | Writer | "No More Cryin'" | |
Jason Mraz | Writer / Producer | "Love Is Still the Answer" | |
Brett Dennen | Writer / Producer | "Here's Looking At You Kid" - single | |
"Be Somebody" | |||
"People I Love" | |||
"Live in the Moment" | |||
"Baker's Globe Mallow" | |||
Ben Rector | Writer | "Sometimes" | |
Missy Higgins | Writer / Producer | "How Was I To Know" | |
LeAnn Rimes & Stevie Nicks | Writer | "Borrowed" | |
Leon Bridges | Writer | "Shy" | |
Phantogram | Writer | "Someday" - single | |
Jeremy Messersmith | Writer | "Once You Get To Know Us" | |
Brett Dennen | Producer | "Already Gone" - single | |
Writer / Producer | "Let's..." | ||
"Home Away From Home" | |||
"Good Vibration" | |||
"Jenny and Jill" | |||
Vance Joy | Writer | "Like Gold" | |
"We're Going Home" - single | |||
2017 | Meg Mac | Writer | "Brooklyn Apartment (It's Louder Than The TV And The Radio)" |
Bishop Briggs | Writer / Producer | "Dream" - lead single | |
Niall Horan | Writer | "Since We're Alone" | |
Noah Cyrus | Producer / Writer | "Almost Famous" | |
Chase & Status | Writer | "Crawling" | |
Halsey | Writer | "Alone" | |
Preservation Hall Jazz Band | Writer | "One Hundred Fires" | |
Cold War Kids | Writer | "Free To Breathe" | |
K. Flay | Writer | "Black Wave" | |
Meklit | Producer / Writer | "Memories of the Future" (ft. Preservation Hall Horns) | |
"This Was Made Here" | |||
Producer | "I Want To Sing For Them All" (ft. Andrew Bird) | ||
"Supernova" | |||
"You Are My Luck" (ft. Preservation Hall Horns) | |||
"Yerakeh Yeresal" (ft. Andrew Bird) | |||
"You Got Me" (ft. Preservation Hall Horns) | |||
"Yesterday Is a Tizita" | |||
"Human Animal" | |||
"Sweet Or Salty" | |||
"Birthday Song" (ft. Preservation Hall Horns) | |||
Aquilo | Writer | "Almost Over" | |
2016 | Sean Watkins | Writer | "Keep Your Promises II" |
Brooke Fraser | Writer | "Let's Be Human" | |
Phantogram | Co-producer / Writer | "You Don't Get Me High Anymore" - lead single | |
"Same Old Blues" - single | |||
Additional production / Writer | "You're Mine" | ||
"Cruel World" | |||
Writer | "Funeral Pyre" | ||
"Answer" | |||
"Run Run Blood" | |||
"Destroyer" | |||
"Calling All" | |||
The Head and the Heart | Writer | "Turn It Around" | |
Dierks Bentley | Writer | "Why Do I Feel" | |
Sara Watkins | Writer | "Say So" | |
"Like New Year's Day" | |||
The Twilight Hours | Writer | "Anymore" | |
"Help Me Find the Way" | |||
Weezer | Writer | "California Kids" | |
Andrew Bird | Writer | "Are You Serious" | |
Rita Wilson | Producer / Writer | "Crying, Crying" | |
Brian Fallon | Writer | "Steve McQueen" | |
Nada Surf | Writer | "Rushing" | |
"Victory's Yours" | |||
Foxes | Producer / Writer | "Devil Side" | |
Panic! at the Disco | Writer | "Emperor's New Clothes" | |
Anthony Wilson | Writer | "Your Footprints" | |
2015 | Florence + The Machine | Writer / Producer | "Conductor" |
Harry Connick, Jr. | Writer | "You Have No Idea" | |
D.A. Wallach | Writer | "Feel" | |
Phases | Writer | "Spark" | |
Chris Stapleton | Writer | "When The Stars Come Out" | |
My Morning Jacket | Writer | "Big Decisions" | |
Rae Morris | Writer | "Unguarded" | |
2014 | Brooke Fraser | Writer | "Magical Machine" |
Spoon | Writer | "New York Kiss" | |
Alex Clare | Producer / Writer | "Three Hearts" | |
Birdy | Producer / Writer | "Tee Shirt" | |
"Best Shot" | |||
The Secret Sisters | Writer | "Iuka" | |
2013 | Gin Wigmore | Writer | "If Only" |
James Blunt | Writer / Producer | "Next Time I'm Seventeen" | |
Leann Rimes | Writer | "I Do Now" | |
Romeo Testa | Writer | "With You" | |
Writer | "I'm So Down" | ||
Birdy | Producer / Writer | "All You Never Say" | |
Additional Production / Writer | "Maybe" | ||
Writer | "All About You" | ||
John Legend | Writer | "You & I (Nobody in the World)" | |
Preservation Hall Jazz Band | Writer | "I Think I Love You" | |
"Rattlin' Bones" | |||
LeAnn Rimes | Writer | "Borrowed" | |
Natalie Maines | Writer | "Free Life" | |
Missy Higgins | Producer | "We Ride" | |
Colbie Caillat & Gavin Degraw | Producer | "We Both Know" | |
2012 | Cory Chisel and The Wandering Sons | Writer | "Never Meant to Love You" |
Jack Carty | Writer | "The Length Of Canada" | |
The Webb Sisters | Writer | "Missing Person" | |
Taylor Swift | Producer / Co-writer | "Treacherous" | |
"Come Back...Be Here" | |||
Pink | Producer / Writer | "The Great Escape" | |
Nas | Producer / Writer | "Roses" | |
Sara Watkins | Writer | "When It Pleases You" | |
Elizaveta | Writer | "Goodbye Song" | |
Audra Mae | Writer | "My Friend the Devil" | |
Missy Higgins | Writer | "Everyone's Waiting" | |
"Set Me on Fire" | |||
Paloma Faith | Writer | "When You're Gone" | |
Dierks Bentley | Writer | "Home" | |
Gin Wigmore | Writer | "Poison" | |
"Roll It All" | |||
2011 | Mike Viola | Writer | "Get You Back" |
Adele | Producer / Writer | "Someone Like You" - single | |
Writer | "One and Only" | ||
"Don't You Remember" | |||
James Morrison | Writer | "The Awakening" | |
"In My Dreams" | |||
Mike Doughty | Writer | "Na Na Nothing" | |
"Holiday (What Do You Want)" | |||
The Downtown Fiction | Writer | "Hurt Me So Good" | |
Nicole Atkins | Writer | "Heavy Boots" | |
Gabe Dixon | Writer | "My Favorite" | |
2010 | Josh Groban | Writer | "Hidden Away" |
"Higher Window" - single | |||
"Bells of NYC" | |||
"War at Home" | |||
"If I Walk Away" - single | |||
"Love Only Knows" | |||
Keith Urban | Writer | "Big Promises" | |
Weezer | Writer | "Ruling Me" | |
Griffin House | Producer / Writer / Mixing | "If You Want" | |
Writer | "Coming Down the Road" | ||
The Bravery | Producer / Writer | "Ours" | |
KT Tunstall | Producer / Writer | "Boy" | |
|Storyhill| | Producer / Mixing Engineer | "Avalon" | |
"Better Angels" | |||
"Well of Sorrow" | |||
"Caught in a Mess" | |||
"Cover Your Tracks" | |||
"World Go Round" | |||
"Getaway" | |||
"A Town Talks" | |||
"Dangerous Weapon" | |||
"Pieces of Love" | |||
Rachael Yamagata | Producer / Writer / Mixing | "You Take My Troubles Away" | |
2009 | Gin Wigmore | Writer | "Hey Ho" |
James Morrison | Writer | "Once When I Was Little" | |
Bic Runga | Writer | "Change of Heart" | |
Parachute | Writer | "Blame It on Me" | |
Ballas Hough Band | Writer | "Turnin' Me On" | |
"She Was The One" | |||
2008 | Jason Mraz | Writer | "Details in the Fabric" |
Absentstar | Writer | "For the Moment" | |
"If You Like It" | |||
"Life Support" | |||
Anberlin | Writer | "Retrace" | |
Carrie Rodriguez | Writer | "She Ain't Me" | |
Mike Doughty | Producer | "Fort Hood" | |
"I Just Want the Girl In the Blue Dress to Keep On Dancing" | |||
"Put It Down" | |||
"More Bacon Than the Pan Can Handle" | |||
"27 Jennifers" | |||
"I Wrote a Song About Your Car" | |||
"I Got the Drop On You" | |||
"Wednesday (Contra la Puerta)" | |||
"Like a Luminous Girl" | |||
"Nectarine (Part One)" | |||
"Navigating the Stars At Night" | |||
Jeremy Messersmith | Producer / Recording and Mixing Engineer | "The Silver City" | |
"Welcome to Suburbia" | |||
"Dead End Job" | |||
"Franklin Avenue" | |||
"The Commuter" | |||
"Miracles" | |||
"Love You to Pieces" | |||
"Breaking Down" | |||
"Skyway" | |||
"Virginia" | |||
"Light Rail" | |||
The New Standards | Producer / Mixing Engineer | "Rock and Roll" | |
"Hey Ya" | |||
"Such Great Heights" | |||
"Watching the Detectives" | |||
"Androgynous" | |||
"Bring It On Home to Me" | |||
"London Calling" | |||
"Toxic" | |||
"Maps" | |||
"Is That All There Is?" | |||
The Gabe Dixon Band | Writer | "All Will Be Well" | |
"Find My Way" | |||
"Five More Hours" | |||
2007 | Dixie Chicks | Writer | "Not Ready to Make Nice" - single |
"Easy Silence" | |||
"Taking the Long Way" | |||
"Lullaby" | |||
"Voice Inside My Head" | |||
"So Hard" | |||
Storyhill | Producer / Writer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | "For A Song" | |
"Happy Man" | |||
"Love Will Find You" | |||
"Sacramento" | |||
"Paradise Lost" | |||
Producer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | "Give Up the Ghost" | ||
"Ballad of Joe Snowboard" | |||
"Highlight" | |||
"Blazing Out of Sight | |||
"Fallen" | |||
"Room In My Heart" | |||
James Morrison | Writer | "Movin' On" | |
Aly & AJ | Writer | "If I Could Have You Back" | |
Brooke Fraser | Writer | "Thief" | |
Absent Star | Producer | "Half Life" | |
"For God Sakes" | |||
"Don't Lock Me Out" | |||
"Life Support" | |||
"A Year from Now" | |||
"Everyone You Know" | |||
"Give In to Me" | |||
"If What You Mean Is Harm" | |||
"Quietly Conceited" | |||
"If You Like It" | |||
"For the Moment" | |||
"All Is Forgotten" | |||
2006 | Sean Watkins | Writer | "I'm Sorry" |
"Runaway Girl" | |||
Eliot Morris | Writer / Producer | "Balancing The World" | |
Lucie Silvas | Writer | "Passionate You" | |
Shaye | Writer | "I Can't Say" | |
2005 | Jason Mraz | Writer | "Did You Get My Message" |
"Song for a Friend" | |||
Mike Doughty | Producer / Writer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | "Busting Up A Starbucks" | |
"American Car" | |||
"Your Misfortune" | |||
"I Hear the Bells" | |||
"Tremendous Brunettes" | |||
Producer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | |||
"Unsingable Name" | |||
"Madeline and Nine" | |||
"White Lexus" | |||
"Sunken-Eyed Girl" | |||
"Grey Ghost" | |||
"His Truth Is Marching On" | |||
Glen Phillips | Writer | "True" | |
"Clear Eyed" | |||
"Released" | |||
Hope Partlow | Writer | "Let Me Try" | |
The New Standards | Producer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | "The Inchworm" | |
"The New Pollution" | |||
"I Will Dare" | |||
"All the Young Dudes" | |||
"Man, Oh Man" | |||
"Nature Boy" | |||
"Only Love Can Break Your Heart" | |||
"Town Crier" | |||
"Love Is the Law" | |||
"Oh Yeah" | |||
"Dark End of the Street" | |||
"My Ship" | |||
"Song 2" | |||
"September Song" | |||
2004 | Rachael Yamagata | Writer | "I Want You" |
Graham Colton | Writer | "Don't Give Up on Me" | |
2003 | Bleu | Writer | "Somethin's Gotta Give" |
Epic Hero | Producer / Mixing Engineer / Recording Engineer | "Hello Hello" | |
"Tear Her Down" | |||
"New Life" | |||
"Stay Awake" | |||
"End of the Line" | |||
"High School" | |||
"One In a Crowd" | |||
"Angel" | |||
"On My Own" | |||
"Something Someone Someday" | |||
"One Fine Day" | |||
"Ease Your Mind" | |||
2000 | Evan and Jaron | Writer | "Ready or Not" |
1999 | Bic Runga | Producer / Writer | "Good Morning Baby" |
References
- Wilson, Daniel Dodd. "ASCAP Ace Search". American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). Retrieved July 11, 2020.
- "Dan Wilson". Discogs. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Margolin, Christopher (June 25, 2013). "Interview: Dan Wilson - From "Closing Time" to Open Doors". thepoetryquestion.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved November 15, 2015.
- "Harvard Radcliffe Class of 1983: 30th Reunion Registered Attendees" (PDF). Alumniconnections.com.
- "Office for the Arts at Harvard Prize Recipients". Ofa.fas.harvard.edu.
- "41st Grammy Awards – 1999". Rock on the Net. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
- "Dan Wilson: Free Life". www.avclub.com. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- "Sacks & Co. /// Dan Wilson". www.sacksco.com. Archived from the original on November 27, 2014. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Raible, Allan (April 20, 2014). "Music Reviews: The Latest From Ingrid Michaelson, Nas, Jason Derulo and More". ABC News. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Farber, Jim (April 15, 2014). "Music reviews: 'Love Without Fear,' 'Food'". nydailynews.com. Daily News L.P. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Cornish, Audie (April 15, 2014). "Perennial Co-Writer Returns With An Album Of His Own (transcript)". NPR.org. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Danton, Eric R. "Adele's Collaborator Dan Wilson Goes Solo With an Album". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Zaleski, Annie. "Dan Wilson: "I'm like the world's expert in super mournful, lonely songs right now"". Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- Truax, Jackson (August 1, 2017). "Remember Semisonic? Their Singer Now Writes Tunes for Adele and Taylor Swift". L.A. Weekly. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
- Riemenschneider, Chris (July 11, 2019). "Dan Wilson is loving California but feeling Minnesotan as his old band Semisonic returns". StarTribune.com. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
- "Premiere: Semisonic's Dan Wilson, Grammy-Winning Adele Collaborator, 'The Rules". Forbes.com. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
- Rivera, Erica (September 30, 2017). "Dan Wilson has written songs with Adele and Taylor Swift -- now it's his turn to sing them". City Pages. Star Tribune. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
- "Is Dan Wilson the Brainiest Rocker?". WSJ Blogs - Speakeasy. June 11, 2014. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- "Dan Wilson Gives Songwriting Advice On Vine - American Songwriter". American Songwriter. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- "Two sides of Adele - by - The San Francisco Examiner". www.sfexaminer.com. Retrieved March 4, 2017.
- "Queen's 'Bohemian Rhapsody' named as 'UK's Favourite Number One single' | NME.COM". NME.COM. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- "The Wall Street Journal's Speakeasy blog".
- Ricci, Claudia (February 9, 2015). "A Hit Single and the Heart-Wrenching Story Behind It".
- "Dan Wilson Music.com". Dan Wilson.