
Dan Mangan is a two-time JUNO award winning & two-time Polaris Music Prize listed musician and songwriter. He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia with his wife and two sons. With Jesse Zubot, he scored Hector And The Search For Happiness, a feature film starring Simon Pegg. Dan has also infrequently been a contributing writer for some publications such as Huffington Post Canada, Montecristo Magazine and The Guardian (Arts section).
Mangan has toured extensively in North America, Europe and Australia and has released four studio LPs as well as a handful of other EPs.
In 2018, Dan will release his 5th LP as well as score new shows for Netflix and AMC.
Q&A:
How do you define creativity and apply it in your life and career?
I think that artistic expression, of any kind at all, fills in the gaps of where language and social context fail. For me, I can convey my thoughts in song more broadly and in a way that isnât really possible simply through conversation, or even long form text.
Where do you find your best creative inspiration or energy?
Iâm always a better writer when Iâm tuned into other peoplesâ work - seeing theatre or dance, reading books, watching good shows or movies, etc. - Iâve always been a political writer and thereâs certainly no shortage of world-woe to digest at the moment.
Whatâs one piece of creative advice or a tip you wish youâd known as a young person?
Just work through. Sometimes you get stuck on something and you canât see the other side. At this point, Iâve written so many bad songs that Iâm less emotionally attached when something I write doesnât quite âget thereâ. But weirdly, you still have to finish it to move beyond it. Iâm embarrassed by some of my early work, but if I hadnât finished it, I wouldnât have been able to move into the work Iâm more proud of. Another thing is figuring out what youâre good at - Iâve spent a lot of time emulating people I admired, and the truth is that the only way Iâm going to produce something meaningful is if I tap into the core of whatever I am, not them.
Who (living or dead) would you most enjoy hearing speak at CreativeMornings?
I have always been blown away at how John Stewart balances creativity and humour with politics and awareness. You have to be a special kind of smart to be that finely tuned into the world AND that funny.
What was the best advice you were ever given?
Even when it seems like it might feel good, being intentionally mean will never (ever) make your life better. What books made a difference in your life and why? Catâs Cradle changed my life in high school. And then Slaughter House Five. They opened a door. Vonnegut has a way of summing up all of humanityâs beautiful absurdity in just a few words.
What books made a difference in your life and why?
Catâs Cradle changed my life in high school. And then Slaughter House Five. They opened a door. Vonnegut has a way of summing up all of humanityâs beautiful absurdity in just a few.