Dan_Hannon

Dan Hannon

Dan Hannon

American musical artist


Dan Hannon is an American record producer, audio engineer, mixer, songwriter, and musician best known for his work with the Band Manchester Orchestra. His works have been streamed over one billion times, and he has produced, co-produced, co-written, and/or performed on albums that have sold over 4.5 million copies. His current Billboard chart success includes two number-one albums, three number-one songs, 13 top ten albums, 15 top 20 albums, three top ten rock albums, and four top ten alternative albums.

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In 2007 Manchester Orchestra released their debut album, I'm Like A Virgin Losing A Child, which Hannon produced. In 2008, he was enlisted to co-produce their second release, Mean Everything To Nothing, with Joe Chiccarelli, resulting in the top 10 rock hit "I've Got Friends".[1] Along with the band he produced the Simple Math album, which was released on May 10, 2011. He subsequently produced their follow-up album Cope, which was released on April 1, 2014. Hannon has played an instrumental role in virtually every commercial recording released by the band and he continues to be a frequent collaborator with frontman Andy Hull

Hannon produced, recorded, mixed, and co-wrote "Anything Worth Saying" by Aaron Shust, which became the number one Christian record in 2006 and was nominated for six Dove Awards, winning three at the 38th GMA Dove Awards. The song "My Savior My God" is Billboard's number two Christian/Gospel song of the decade of the 2000s. Hannon was nominated for a Dove Award for 'Pop Contemporary Album' of the year in 2007 for Shust's second release, Whispered and Shouted.

Discography

P = Producer • M = Mixer • E = Engineer • I = Instrumentalist • W = Writer • AP = Additional Production

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[2][3]

Awards and acknowledgments


References

  1. "Mediabase Airplay Charts (Alternative, Active Rock, Mainstream Rock) 8/3/09 | The Audio Perv". Theaudioperv.com. Retrieved September 3, 2020.
  2. "Dan Hannon". AllMusic. 2010. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  3. "Dan Hannon profile". Discogs.com. 2010. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  4. "Profile of Dan Hannon". Grammy365.com. 2010. Archived from the original on January 24, 2013.

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