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Saturday, May 12, 2018

Daniel Lanois | NUVO
src: nuvomagazine.com

Daniel Roland Lanois ( lan-WAH; born September 19, 1951) is a Canadian record producer, guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter.

Lanois has released several albums of his own work. However, he is best known for producing albums for a wide variety of artists, including Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Peter Gabriel, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson, and Brandon Flowers. Lanois also collaborated with Brian Eno: most famously on producing several albums for U2, including the multi-platinum The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby. Three albums produced or co-produced by Lanois have won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year. Four other albums received Grammy nominations.

Lanois wrote and performed the music for Billy Bob Thornton's film Sling Blade (1996).


Video Daniel Lanois



Career

Early career

Lanois started his production career when he was 17, recording local artists including Simply Saucer with his brother Bob Lanois in a studio in the basement of their mother's home in Ancaster, Ontario. Later, Lanois started Grant Avenue Studios in an old house he purchased in Hamilton, Ontario. He worked with a number of local bands, including Martha and the Muffins (for whom his sister Jocelyne played bass), Ray Materick, Spoons, and the Canadian children's singer Raffi.

Producer

In 1981 Lanois played on and produced the album This Is The Ice Age by Martha And The Muffins. In 1985 he earned a CASBY award for his work on a Martha and the Muffins album.

Lanois worked collaboratively with Brian Eno on some of Eno's own projects, one of which was the theme song for David Lynch's film adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune. Eno invited him to co-produce U2's album The Unforgettable Fire. Along with Eno, he went on to produce U2's The Joshua Tree, the 1987 Grammy Award for Album of the Year winner, and some of the band's other works including Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind, both of which were nominated for the same award but did not win. Lanois once again collaborated with U2 and Brian Eno on the band's 2009 album, No Line on the Horizon. He was involved in the songwriting process as well as mixing and production.

Lanois' early work with U2 led to him being hired to produce albums for other top-selling artists. He collaborated with Peter Gabriel on his album Birdy (1985), the soundtrack to Alan Parker's film of the same name, and subsequently spent most of 1985 co-producing Gabriel's album So, which was released in 1986 and became his best-selling release, earning multi-platinum sales and a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. Lanois later co-produced Gabriel's follow-up, Us, which was released in 1992 and also went platinum.

Bono recommended Lanois to Bob Dylan in the late 1980s; in 1989 Lanois produced Dylan's Oh Mercy. Eight years later, Dylan and Lanois worked together on Time Out of Mind, which won another Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1997. In his autobiographical Chronicles, Vol. 1, Dylan describes in depth the contentious but rewarding working relationship he developed with Lanois.

Wrecking Ball, his 1995 collaboration with Emmylou Harris, won a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album. In 1998, he produced and appeared on Willie Nelson's album Teatro.

Lanois was working on Neil Young's record Le Noise in June 2010 when he was hospitalized after suffering multiple injuries in a motorcycle crash in the Silver Lake area of Los Angeles. He has since recovered. Lanois' production is recognizable and notable for its 'big' and 'live' drum sound, atmospheric guitars and ambient reverb. Rolling Stone called Lanois the "most important record producer to emerge in the Eighties."

Recording artist

As well as being a producer, Lanois is also a songwriter, musician and recording artist. He has released several solo albums and film scores; his first album, Acadie, was released in 1989. A number of Lanois' songs have been covered by other artists, including Dave Matthews, Jerry Garcia Band, Willie Nelson, Tea Party, Anna Beljin, Isabelle Boulay and Emmylou Harris, and his albums have had some success, particularly in Canada. Lanois plays the guitar, pedal steel and drums. Belladonna, an instrumental album released in 2005, was nominated for a Grammy. Lanois also provided an instrumental score for LOUDquietLOUD, a documentary about the Pixies.

Lanois premiered a documentary entitled Here Is What Is at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2007. The film chronicles the recording of his album of the same name and includes footage of the actual recording. The album Here Is What Is was released, first by download, then in compact disc, in late 2007 and early 2008. Soon after, Lanois released a three-disc recording called Omni.

In October 2009, Lanois started a project called Black Dub which features Lanois on guitar, Brian Blade on drums, and Daryl Johnson on bass, along with multi-instrumentalist/singer Trixie Whitley. They released a self-titled album in 2010. In 2014, Lanois played with Emmylou Harris as a sideman and opening act on a tour focused on the Wrecking Ball material he produced.

Solo career

On October 28. 2014 Lanois released an album titled Flesh and Machine on ANTI- Records, based on Brian Eno's ambient albums. The instrumental album consists primarily of original atmospheric and process-based sounds, blending pedal steel guitar and a variety of digital and analog sound processing devices. He was assisted by the drummer Brian Blade. In 2016, he released the album Goodbye to Language with Rocco DeLuca.

Lanois released Goodbye to Language on ANTI- Records in September 2016. The album is a collaboration between him and musician Rocco DeLuca.

The collaborative album Venetian Snares x Daniel Lanois was released on Venetian Snares' label Timesig in May 2018.


Maps Daniel Lanois



Awards

Lanois won a Juno Award in 1990 as most promising artist. Lanois has received 11 Grammy Awards for his work with various artists, including Bob Dylan, U2, Emmylou Harris and Neil Young.

In 2005, he was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame. In June 2013, he received a lifetime achievement award at the Governor General's Performing Arts Awards.In 1990


Gallery: Daniel Lanois, - Drawings Art Gallery
src: drawingninja.com


Discography


The Lost Boys: Hard-To-Find '80s Albums (“Acadie” By Daniel Lanois ...
src: analogkidblog.files.wordpress.com


Videography


Gallery: Daniel Lanois, - Drawings Art Gallery
src: drawingninja.com


Production credits

  • Demo - Simply Saucer, 1974 (not released commercially until 1989, on the album Cyborgs Revisited)
  • Blues and Sentimental - Jackie Washington, 1976 (As "Dan Lanois")
  • Hobo's Taunt- Willie P. Bennett, 1977 (Engineered, as "Dan Lanois", with Bob Lanois)
  • More Singable Songs - Raffi, 1977 (Recording credit as "Dan Lanois")
  • Can't Wait For Summer - Ron Neilson, 1978
  • Choice Cuts - Crackers, 1978 (As "Dan Lanois")
  • Desperate Cosmetics - Scott Merritt, 1979
  • Millionaires, 1980 EP (As "Danny Lanois") (included two members of Teenage Head)
  • This is the Ice Age - Martha and the Muffins, 1981
  • Dream Away - Bernie LaBarge, 1981
  • Mama Quilla, KKK, Angry Young Woman - 3-song 12" Album- 1982, Mama Quilla II
  • Dance After Curfew - Nash the Slash, 1982
  • Danseparc - Martha and the Muffins, 1982
  • Ambient 4/On Land - Brian Eno, 1982 (Engineer's credit as "Danny Lanois")
  • Parachute Club - Parachute Club, 1983
  • Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks - Brian Eno, 1983
  • The Pearl - Harold Budd and Brian Eno, 1984
  • Mystery Walk - M + M, 1984
  • The Unforgettable Fire - U2, 1984
  • Secrets and Sins - Luba, 1984
  • Thursday Afternoon - Brian Eno, 1985
  • Hybrid - Michael Brook, 1985
  • Birdy - Peter Gabriel, 1985
  • Voices - Roger Eno, 1985
  • Power Spot - Jon Hassell, 1986
  • So - Peter Gabriel, 1986
  • The Joshua Tree - U2, 1987
  • Robbie Robertson - Robbie Robertson, 1987
  • Acadie - Daniel Lanois, 1989
  • Oh Mercy - Bob Dylan, 1989
  • Yellow Moon - Neville Brothers, 1989
  • Home - Hothouse Flowers, 1990
  • Achtung Baby - U2, 1991
  • Flash of the Spirit - Jon Hassell and Farafina, 1992
  • Us - Peter Gabriel, 1992
  • The Last of the Mohicans - movie soundtrack, 1992
  • For the Beauty of Wynona - Daniel Lanois, 1993
  • Ron Sexsmith - Ron Sexsmith, 1994
  • Wrecking Ball - Emmylou Harris, 1995
  • Night to Night - Geoffrey Oryema, 1996
  • Fever In Fever Out - Luscious Jackson, 1996
  • Time Out of Mind - Bob Dylan, 1997
  • Brian Blade Fellowship - Brian Blade, 1998
  • 12 Bar Blues - Scott Weiland, 1998
  • Teatro - Willie Nelson, 1998
  • The Million Dollar Hotel: Music from the Motion Picture - movie soundtrack, 2000
  • All That You Can't Leave Behind - U2, 2000
  • La Belle Vista - Harold Budd, 2003 (secretly recorded in Lanois Los Angeles living room)
  • How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb - U2, 2004 (track "Love and Peace or Else")
  • Dusk & Summer - Dashboard Confessional, 2006 (also produced by Don Gilmore)
  • loudQUIETloud, A film about the pixies - movie soundtrack, 2006
  • Back Where You Belong - Sinéad O'Connor, 2007.
  • Let It Go  - Mother Superior, 2007.
  • Snake Road - Bob Lanois, 2006.
  • No Line on the Horizon - U2, 2009 (plus songwriting credits).
  • "Mind Games" & "Night Nurse" - Sinéad O'Connor, 2009.
  • Mercy - Rocco DeLuca and the Burden, 2009.
  • Flamingo - Brandon Flowers, 2010.
  • Le Noise - Neil Young, 2010.
  • Honest Mistake - Jim Wilson, 2012.
  • Battle Born - The Killers, 2012 (co-writer on tracks "The Way It Was", "Heart of a Girl", and "Be Still").
  • Rocco Deluca - Rocco Deluca, 2014.

Producer Daniel Lanois attends the 2011 Juno Awards at the Air ...
src: arhiva.dalje.com


See also

  • Canadian Music Hall of Fame
  • List of ambient music artists
  • Music of Canada

Gallery: Daniel Lanois, - Drawings Art Gallery
src: drawingninja.com


Citations


Daniel Lanois | STILL WATER | The Commodore Ballroom | July 5 ...
src: i.ytimg.com


References

  • Daniel Lanois interview on Freethescene.com

Daniel Lanois, Venetian Snares Announce New Album of 'Gospel ...
src: www.self-titledmag.com


External links

  • Official site

Source of article : Wikipedia