Jump to content

Dan Braun

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 174.103.114.44 (talk) at 05:22, 22 July 2013 (→‎Creepy and Eerie relaunch: reads like an ad). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dan Braun
Braun signing copies of the relaunched Creepy and Eerie at the Dark Horse Comics booth at the 2011 New York Comic Con.
Background information
Occupation(s)Musician, artist, movie producer

Dan Braun is a musician, composer, writer, editor, art director, and film producer.

Early music career

Dan Braun and his twin brother Josh started several punk bands in high school in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, including Platinum Hardcore and Hack Ptooey. Their first real band was called Spinal Root Gang. Other members included Trey Sabatelli, Karen Fish, Janis Krasnow, Madonna Ciccone and their father, Saul Braun. Braun moved to New York City in 1979. Josh followed shortly thereafter, and they started the post-punk/no wave band Circus Mort with Rick Oller and Michael Gira, who later went on to form the Swans.

After recording one EP on Labor Records in 1981, Circus Mort broke up. Braun joined with Gira in the Swans for a short stint in 1982, and was on the album Body to Body, Job to Job (1991). He then went on to play with a myriad of New York bands and musicians including DNA co-founder Robin Crutchfield, performance artist Julia Heyward, and composer Pat Irwin. Dan and Josh then joined The Del-Byzanteens; Dan played drums. Other members of the band were Phil Kline and soon to be film director Jim Jarmusch. They recorded one album, Lies to Live By, and one 45 single, "Draft Riot". Braun also toured and recorded with avant garde/no wave composer Glenn Branca on his Symphony #5. Dan and Josh formed their own band in 1982 called Deep Six with Rick Oller, Trey Sabitelli, and Tony Braun, their younger brother. The band recorded one album, Garage D'or, on Twin Tone/Coyote Records in 1987 and released one single on #1 Records, "Pretty White/Looking for a Reason", in 1993. Braun played with producer Lefferts Brown in a band called Radio Firefight. Braun replaced Jules Baptiste from Red Decade on bass. The line-up was Braun on Vox bass and Lefferts on ARP 2500. The band played only two shows—one at the top floor of Danceteria and the other at the Speed Trials.[citation needed]

Advertising career

While still pursuing his musical career, Braun became a graphic designer–art director in the advertising business. One of his more banal early freelance design assignments was the famous logo for Bed Bath & Beyond. Braun then ran the graphics division of TBWA Worldwide. Successes there include the domination of the advertising campaign for Absolut Vodka, for which he sold nine ads in his first year. Braun took over the creative duties on the prestigious account. He won several awards that year, including the Art Directors Club Award. Braun worked on the brand for five more years and continued to win awards and help push the ad campaign into new territories, including the internet. He worked on "Absolut Panushka", an experimental animation site, "Absolut Kelly" focusing on the work of Kevin Kelly and finally "Absolut DJ", a custom online DJ application that let consumers create "visual music" and interact with musical theorists like DJ Spooky and Coldcut.

Launching Submarine

In 1998, Braun and two partners launched their own company, Submarine, which was called a "convergence programming studio". The first project was "Absolut Director", a project that let users create their own rescripted movies online. Spike Lee, Mary Harron, and Chris Smith were three of the directors who participated. The site won advertising and web design awards and was written up in the Daily News and USA Today.[1][2][3]

Submarine Entertainment

Submarine Entertainment, formed in 2001, expanded the entertainment activities of the company and reunited the Braun twins as working partners. Submarine Entertainment represents, produces, and develops feature films and documentaries. The company has represented and sold for distribution a long list of successful films, including "Being Elmo", "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" "Buck", "Woody Allen: Untitled Documentary, Man on Wire, Control Room, Soul Power, Kill Your Idols, Searching for Sugar man, Cropsey, Super Size Me, Spellbound, DIG!, Baghead, The Cove, The Eclipse, Bulletproof Salesman, Of All the Things, Tiny Furniture, House of the Devil, Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, Smash His Camera, LA Mission, Mystery Team, Thundersoul, and Dark Mirror. Variety listed Submarine Entertainment as one of the top film reps in the business.[4][5]

Braun executive-produced the Palm Pictures released film Kill Your Idols in 2006, which won best New York documentary at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. Also seen at the Tribeca Film Festival was Blank City, a film about 1970s experimental and no-wave filmmakers that Braun Executive Produced and was a music consultant on. The film Gravity, about base jumping, went into preproduction in 2011, produced in association with Alex Gibney. Braun also produces and created the Instant Talk Show (instanttalkshow.com) with host Nick Scoullar. Braun is currently working on a documentary on free jazz with filmmaker Tom Surgal and Sonic Youth guitarist Thurston Moore.[6]

Creepy and Eerie relaunch

Braun at the Dark Horse Comics booth at the 2011 New York Comic Con, beside a model dressed as Uncle Creepy.

In 2001 Braun and his 3 partners started pursuing the acquisition of the classic horror comic magazine properties Creepy and Eerie. After a protracted seven-year negotiation between Braun and the original publisher, Jim Warren, the group formed New Comic Company to hold the rights to the newly-acquired horror and science fiction library. Braun contacted publisher Mike Richardson at Dark Horse Comics and worked out a partnership/license deal to release hardback compilations of the entire 246-issue run of Creepy and Eerie. The first Creepy Archive #1 was released in 2008. Braun collaborated on the editorial chores with Shawna Gore from Dark Horse. Eerie Archive #1 was released in March 2009. it made #2 on the New York Times Bestsellers list for graphic novels.[7] In 2009, Braun and Gore won the Eisner Award for Best Archival Collection - Comic Books for their work on the Creepy Archives.[8]

In July 2009, an all-new quarterly Creepy comic was released, with classic artist Bernie Wrightson and Mad Magazine artist Angelo Torres, who was brought in to illustrate Braun's story "Hell Hound Blues" in issue #1. Modern writers, creators, and artists like Jason Shawn Alexander, Doug Moench, Joe Lansdale, and Joe Harris are contributing to the series. The covers are painted by Goon artist Eric Powell. Braun takes the role of consulting editor on the series. Issues #2 and #3 feature Nick Cuti, Kevin Ferrara, Nathan Fox, and classic pulp cover artist Chuck Pyle.[9][10][11][12]

Creepy development for movies, television, gaming, animation, licensing, and internet is ongoing. Dan Braun recently announced at the San Diego Comic Con that he and his brother were developing a Creepy anthology movie with Chris Columbus and 1492 Pictures.[7][13]

As of April 2012 the Creepy Quarterly is up to issue #8 which features a new cover by Richard Corben and stories by Jeff Parker and Collen Coover, Doug Moench and Kelley Jones, Rick Geary, Dan Braun and Kyle Baker, and Bernie Wrightson and Bruce Jones. The Creepy Archives are up to edition #12 and the Eerie Archives are up to edition #10.

It was announced at the San Diego Comic Con on July 12, 2012 that Braun and his brother Josh were teaming up with director/producer Chris Columbus to produce a horror anthology feature film based on Creepy magazine consisting of four segments, one of which will be written and directed by Columbus.[14]

The Dan Braun Experience

Braun writes, records, and produces music under the name "The Dan Braun Experience". The DBExperience had a song included on the soundtrack of the documentary on Jean-Michel Basquiat, titled Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child, released in 2010. The song, titled "Dirty Windows", was written in 1987 but not recorded until 2002. Recently Braun's original band from 1985, Deep Six was featured on the soundtrack to the Mark Pellington film "I Melt With You". The song "The Lawn" written by Dan Braun and Rick Oller was a featured song in the movie and was included in the CD Soundtrack to the film.

References

  1. ^ www.submarine.com
  2. ^ "DAILY NEWS: Submarine Launches, Vancouver Winners and a Correction".
  3. ^ "Online Experience Allows Everyone the Opportunity to Create an Original Movie".
  4. ^ Ihttp://www.variety.com/profiles/Company/role/Foreign%20Distribution%20Sales/2124855/Submarine+Entertainment.html?dataSet=1
  5. ^ http://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.fashionweekdaily.com/uploads/49776/original.pdf?1272292438
  6. ^ http://login.vnuemedia.com/hr/login/login_subscribe.jsp?id=zf1eaW8N0UQ6%2FI7ScH8pMBa0vvBdIda7DQkUXRc45Ml8gBKQN%2FYAzAAr%2FvunqWESkm74lcZmc9Je%0AAWf2v9FDGRwFq7ucLKEggohNmhlkoDRsK5614BJnPXu%2B1UCRY696cESZAWdPtWqTi0PTpjUUFacx%0AkmbH6ZJWOHLMtSIQb%2FAslCKli3VsigNVZZs5RrRy
  7. ^ a b http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2010/may/206052.html
  8. ^ http://www.comic-con.org/cci/cci_eisners_09win.shtml
  9. ^ "Graphic Books Best Seller Lists: March 14". The New York Times. March 20, 2009.
  10. ^ http://www.scifislacker.com/comics/dark-horse-gets-creepy-and-eerie.shtml
  11. ^ http://www.darkhorse.com/Comics/15-862/Creepy-Comics-
  12. ^ http://www.comicvine.com/news/review-creepy-3/141182/
  13. ^ "Creepy (New Comic Co.)". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Fleming, Mike (July 12, 2012). "Comic-Con: Chris Columbus, Braun Brothers Plot CREEPY Magazine Feature". Deadline New York.

Template:Persondata