NOTE: THIS IS MY OLD BIO. IT WILL BE UPDATED SOON-ISH.

Since the release of his 2006 album Neon and Gold, of which Mark Suppanz of The Big Takeover magazine wrote, “It’s hard not to fall for this intoxicating and expertly-crafted LP,” Dan Jacob Wallace has been steadily establishing himself as one of the more adventurous voices in music today. Michael Mee of Americana UK had this to say about Dan’s 2007 follow-up to Neon and Gold: “Put simply, Culture of Self is about daring to be different, and the magic that comes when you do. Even if it were only half as good as it is, it should be treasured for its originality alone.” And of his 2008 release, Reattachment, Jon Worley at Aiding & Abetting wrote, “He not only blenderizes just about every song on this album, he does so with a style and grace that is almost unthinkable.” Two songs from Reattachment were also included in the acclaimed documentary American Artifact: The Rise of American Rock Poster Art.

His latest album, Den of Maniacs, referred to by Suppanz as an “unqualified winner,” has continued to garner positive response from fans and critics.

Dan, who took a nearly 10-year break from music to study philosophy, is back at it in 2021 and developing material for new albums, the first of which he aims to release in February 2022. (NOTE: I re-focused this goal on developing and releasing “prototypes”; more on that soon.)

A sampling of Dan’s past projects include fronting the indie rock band The Pindrops, scoring music for a play and two (very) indie films, serving as co-Director of the Chicago Chamber Music Collective (who also premiered his first chamber works in Chicago), and organizing critically acclaimed concert series of contemporary classical music. He is also a CAAP Grant recipient.

Background

Dan was born in Philadelphia and moved every few years thereafter to a diverse range of settings, including a small village in Germany and a trailer park in Mississippi. In 1993, after an ill-suited and short-lived stint in the Air Force, he made his way to Chicago, where he lived for 18 years before moving to New York City, where he lived 7.5 years (and earned a degree in philosophy) before moving to Milwaukee in 2019. (NOTE: In 2023, he moved back to Chicago, where he resides in 2025.)

He began playing guitar at age 14, starting with the power chords from “Raising Hell” by Run-DMC. Within a handful of months he was playing along with records by the likes of Frank Zappa, Randy Rhoads, and Charlie Parker. Other major inspirations at the time include Steve Vai and Cacophony. It also wasn’t long before he was inspired by J.S. Bach, Conlon Nancarrow, Lili Boulanger, Dmitri Shostakovich, and many others to begin composing chamber works, which would be his focus until he discovered Caetano Veloso in his mid-20s and began writing songs; other songwriter discoveries soon provided new influence and inspiration, including Jacques Brel, Fiona Apple, Aimee Mann, and Leonard Cohen.