Dan the Automator
Dan the Automator, born Daniel M. Nakamura in 1966, is an American hip hop producer, composer, DJ, and engineer based in San Francisco, California.[1] Renowned for his genre-blending production style that fuses hip-hop with electronic, funk, and orchestral elements, he has shaped alternative hip-hop through innovative sampling and collaborations with diverse artists.[2][3] Raised in San Francisco's Sunset District to Japanese-American parents, Nakamura began his musical journey at age three with classical violin training before discovering turntables and drum machines during his high school years in the 1980s.[4] He established his home studio, the Glue Factory, in his parents' basement, where he hosted Bay Area talents and contributed beats to DJ Shadow's landmark album Endtroducing..... (1996). His breakthrough came with the production of Kool Keith's avant-garde rap album Dr. Octagonecologyst (1996), which pioneered psychedelic and experimental hip-hop sounds.[2] Throughout his nearly three-decade career, Nakamura has co-founded influential projects such as Handsome Boy Modeling School with Prince Paul, releasing the eclectic So... How's Your Girl? (1999), and collaborated on Del the Funky Homosapien's sci-fi concept album Deltron 3030 (2000).[1][2] He also co-produced Gorillaz's self-titled debut (2001) with Damon Albarn, contributing to multi-platinum success and hits like "Clint Eastwood," while working with acts like Cornershop on their UK gold-certified When I Was Born for the 7th Time (1997) and Kasabian on albums West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum (2009) and Velociraptor! (2011).[1] More recently, he co-produced The Black Keys' "Beautiful People" from their 2024 album Ohio Players and completed production on Deltron 3030's third album, announced in 2025. Beyond music, his compositions feature in films including Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010) and Booksmart (2019), and he founded the publishing company Sharkman Music along with labels 75 Ark and Bulk Recordings.[1][2][5][6]Biography
Early life
Daniel M. Nakamura, professionally known as Dan the Automator, was born on August 29, 1966, in San Francisco, California.[7] Raised in the city's Sunset District neighborhood, he grew up in a Japanese American family shaped by historical trauma, as his parents had been interned as children in Japanese American internment camps during World War II.[8] His father worked for the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency, while his mother taught at San Francisco City College, providing a stable environment amid the family's post-internment recovery.[4] From an early age, Nakamura was immersed in music through classical training; his mother enrolled him in violin lessons at just three years old, fostering an initial appreciation for structured musical expression.[5] This childhood exposure extended to a broad range of genres, as he absorbed pop, soul, and emerging rap music, developing a particular fascination with rap groups like Run-DMC in the early 1980s.[5] These experiences laid the groundwork for his eclectic style, blending orchestral elements with urban sounds in his later productions. By high school in the 1980s, Nakamura's interests shifted dramatically toward hip hop culture in the vibrant San Francisco scene, where he traded his violin for turntables and purchased a drum machine to experiment with beats. He attended Lick-Wilmerding High School.[9] He built an informal studio, known as the Glue Factory, in his parents' basement, immersing himself in the local turntablism and production community alongside figures like DJ Q-Bert and Mix Master Mike.[5] This period marked his transition from classical roots to the foundational skills of DJing and beat-making that would define his career.[4]Education and early influences
Nakamura graduated from San Francisco State University with a degree in design and industry.[10] He began DJing as a teenager in the 1980s, drawing inspiration from the vibrant Bay Area hip hop scene and local pioneers such as DJ Q-Bert and Mix Master Mike, whose turntable innovations shaped the region's underground culture.[2][11] This early exposure to scratching and beat-matching techniques fueled his transition from passive listener to active participant in hip hop's evolution. Building on his childhood classical violin training, Nakamura integrated these disciplined foundations with the raw energy of emerging hip hop, turntablism, and electronic experimentation, creating a distinctive style that blended orchestral elements with sampled beats and futuristic sounds.[12][2] Influences like Public Enemy's layered production and Mantronix's electronic-infused tracks further guided his approach, emphasizing innovative sampling over traditional instrumentation.[13] These formative experiences culminated in his initial releases, marking his entry into professional production: the debut EP Music to Be Murdered By in 1989, an independent project showcasing raw breaks and electro-hip hop vibes, followed by King of the Beats in 1990, which highlighted his growing prowess in crafting party-ready instrumentals.[14][15]Career
Early career and breakthrough
In the early 1990s, Dan Nakamura, known professionally as Dan the Automator, established himself in the Bay Area music scene by building a home studio called the Glue Factory in his parents' basement, where he hosted local artists and collaborated on early projects, including assisting DJ Shadow on the 1996 album Endtroducing......[16] This setup marked his transition from DJing and crate-digging to professional production, drawing on influences from underground hip-hop and eclectic sampling techniques. By the late 1990s, he founded the independent record label 75 Ark in 1998, which was distributed by Tommy Boy Records and served as a platform for experimental hip-hop releases during its brief run.[17] Nakamura's breakthrough came in 1996 with his production work on Dr. Octagonecologyst, the debut album by Kool Keith under the alias Dr. Octagon, released initially on Bulk Recordings. The album featured Nakamura's innovative beats, incorporating sci-fi-themed sampling from sources like medical texts and vintage electronics, blended with analog synthesizers such as the Memorymoog to create a futuristic sound that diverged from mainstream hip-hop of the era.[18][19] Turntablist DJ Q-Bert contributed scratches, enhancing the project's otherworldly atmosphere, and the record's underground success—selling thousands in the Bay Area before wider re-releases—established Nakamura as a key figure in alternative rap production.[16] Throughout the late 1990s, Nakamura expanded his production scope beyond hip-hop. In 1997, he co-produced tracks on Cornershop's When I Was Born for the 7th Time, infusing the indie rock band's sound with hip-hop rhythms and sitar elements, contributing to the album's UK gold certification and critical acclaim, including Spin magazine's #1 ranking for the year.[20][16] The following year, 1998, he helmed the remix album Bombay the Hard Way: Guns, Cars and Sitars, reworking 1970s Bollywood funk tracks by composers Kalyanji–Anandji into psychedelic, beat-driven compositions that highlighted his skill in fusing global sounds with electronic production.[21] Nakamura released his debut solo album, A Much Better Tomorrow, in 2000 on 75 Ark, expanding on his 1996 EP of the same name with additional tracks featuring Kool Keith. The project blended hip-hop beats with lounge and jazz influences, showcasing Nakamura's signature eclectic style through moody instrumentals and collaborative verses recorded at the Glue Factory.[22][23]Major collaborations
Dan the Automator's collaborative projects often blended hip-hop production with eclectic guest artists and conceptual themes, showcasing his ability to craft cohesive group efforts across genres. One of his most enduring partnerships was with producer Prince Paul, forming Handsome Boy Modeling School in 1999 as a playful hip-hop collective themed around a fictional modeling agency. Their debut album, So... How's Your Girl?, released that year on Tommy Boy Records, featured contributions from artists like Beastie Boys' Mike D, Del the Funky Homosapien, and DJ Shadow, earning acclaim for its innovative sampling and humorous skits.[24][25] The duo followed with White People in 2004 on Elektra Records, expanding the roster to include RZA, Phonte, and Father Guido Sarducci, while maintaining the project's satirical edge through tracks like "The World's Gone Mad."[26] In 2023, Handsome Boy Modeling School reunited for the limited-edition vinyl LP Music to Drink Martinis To, a seven-track release produced in partnership with Fords Gin, blending lounge-inspired beats with vocalists such as Chali 2na and Mixmaster Mike.[27][28] Another landmark collaboration was Deltron 3030, a futuristic hip-hop supergroup with rapper Del the Funky Homosapien and turntablist Kid Koala. Their self-titled debut album, released in 2000 on 75 Ark, presented a dystopian sci-fi narrative through Del's intricate storytelling over Automator's orchestral, sample-heavy beats, with scratches from Kid Koala enhancing the otherworldly atmosphere; tracks like "Virus" and "3030" critiqued corporate greed and technology's perils.[29][30] The project reunited over a decade later for Event II in 2013 on Artificial Intelligence Records, continuing the conceptual saga with evolved production incorporating live instrumentation and guests like Damon Albarn, while maintaining its bold, narrative-driven structure.[31] Automator's production role extended to virtual band Gorillaz's self-titled debut album in 2001 on Parlophone Records, where he helmed most tracks alongside Damon Albarn, infusing hip-hop elements into the group's alternative rock sound. His beats underpinned the breakthrough single "Clint Eastwood," which sampled the Ennio Morricone theme and featured Del the Funky Homosapien's verse, propelling the album to platinum status in the US and triple platinum in the UK with over 500 million streams to date.[5][32] In addition to these group endeavors, Automator formed the electronic duo Got a Girl with actress and vocalist Mary Elizabeth Winstead, whom he met on the set of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World. Their debut album, I Love You But I Have to Go, arrived in 2014 on Plan G, mixing trip-hop grooves with Winstead's soulful delivery on songs like "Did We Live Too Fast?" The pair supported the release with a short 2015 tour across four US cities, including stops in Seattle, San Francisco, New York, and Los Angeles.[33][34] Automator also produced full albums for British rock band Kasabian, including the multi-platinum West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum (2009) and Velociraptor! (2011) on RCA Records, where he co-engineered sessions in San Francisco to add psychedelic textures to their indie rock anthems.[5][35] Earlier, he contributed beats to Bay Area rapper Lyrics Born's 2005 album Same !@#$ Different Day on Quannum Projects, including the track "I'm Just Raw," and later produced "This Song's Delicious" featuring Sitcom Dad on Lyrics Born's 2022 collaborative project Mobile Homies: Season 1.[36][37]Film scoring and recent projects
Dan the Automator marked his entry into major film scoring with the original motion picture score for Booksmart (2019), directed by Olivia Wilde, blending hip-hop, classical, and rock elements to underscore the coming-of-age comedy's emotional and sensory moments.[38] The eight-track album, released via Lakeshore Records, received praise for its innovative fusion that enhanced the film's themes without dominating the narrative, with Wilde highlighting Nakamura's contributions as adding "multiple dimensions" through complex and emotional compositions.[39] This work, his first full feature score, drew on his production background to create an eclectic sound that complemented the movie's mix of indie sensibilities and hip-hop influences in the broader soundtrack.[38] In 2022, he composed the original score for Easter Sunday, a family comedy directed by Jay Chandrasekhar and starring Jo Koy, contributing nine instrumental tracks that capture the film's vibrant, cultural energy.[40] Released via Sony Masterworks, the soundtrack album emphasizes rhythmic and atmospheric pieces tailored to the story's Filipino-American holiday setting, showcasing his ability to integrate diverse musical textures into cinematic storytelling.[41] Throughout the 2020s, Dan the Automator has extended his scoring work to television, including the Netflix holiday series Dash & Lily (2020), where he crafted a whimsical, upbeat score to accompany the romantic narrative set in New York City.[42] This project reflects his ongoing engagement with multimedia formats, building on earlier television contributions like the PBS series Broken Bread (2019).[43] In a notable recent development, Nakamura was selected in 2025 as one of the remixers for the 2026 FIFA World Cup's official theme, producing a "sonic ID" for the San Francisco Bay Area host city—a short audio piece that encapsulates the region's cultural rhythm and diversity.[44] In 2024, he co-wrote and co-produced "Beautiful People" for The Black Keys' album Ohio Players. That year, Deltron 3030 announced and launched a 25th anniversary tour for their debut album, with dates across North America through October 2025. Following the 2023 reactivation of Handsome Boy Modeling School with new singles such as "How Does It Feel?" and "Case Study," he has hinted at further releases and collaborations in the decade, maintaining his signature genre-blending approach across media.[45][46][5]Discography
Solo studio albums
Dan the Automator's solo studio albums showcase his evolution as a producer, blending hip-hop foundations with experimental electronic and orchestral textures across full-length releases. His only solo studio album to date is his debut effort, A Much Better Tomorrow, released on July 18, 2000, by 75 Ark, which expands on an earlier EP with 11 tracks that fuse lounge-hip hop elements through innovative sampling and big, loping beats layered with string arrangements reflective of his classical violin background.[47][48] The album features guest rappers such as Kool Keith (under aliases like Sinister 6000) on multiple tracks, delivering quirky, sci-fi-infused rhymes over creepy, tension-building production, while instrumentals like "Cartoon Capers" evoke Looney Tunes whimsy.[47] Critics praised its freaky innovation and superb guest vocals, hailing it as a high point in underground hip-hop where "hip-hop just doesn’t get any better."[48][49]Collaborative albums
Dan the Automator co-founded the conceptual hip-hop project Handsome Boy Modeling School with Prince Paul, releasing their debut album So... How’s Your Girl? on October 19, 1999, via Tommy Boy Records. The album blended trip-hop, alternative hip-hop, and eclectic samples, featuring guest appearances from artists such as Beastie Boys, Del the Funky Homosapien, and DJ Shadow, which highlighted the duo's innovative approach to genre fusion.[50] The project returned with White People on November 9, 2004, distributed by Elektra Records in association with Tommy Boy. This sophomore effort expanded on the debut's experimental sound, incorporating rock, reggae, and conscious hip-hop elements with contributions from RZA, Father Guido Sarducci, and Jack Black, emphasizing thematic explorations of identity and media satire.[51][52] In March 2023, Handsome Boy Modeling School issued a limited-edition seven-track vinyl LP titled Music to Drink Martinis To, produced in partnership with Fords Gin and available exclusively bundled with bottles of the spirit. The release, featuring jazzy, lounge-infused tracks with guest vocals from Chino Moreno and Mike Patton, marked a thematic nod to sophisticated cocktail culture while reviving the project's collaborative spirit.[28][27] As part of the hip-hop supergroup Deltron 3030, Dan the Automator served as producer alongside rapper Del the Funky Homosapien (as Deltron Zero) and turntablist Kid Koala, delivering their self-titled sci-fi concept album on May 23, 2000, through 75 Ark. The record depicted a dystopian future in 3030, with orchestral beats and narrative lyrics critiquing corporate overreach, earning acclaim for its ambitious storytelling.[30] The group reconvened for Event II on September 30, 2013, via Bulk Recordings, continuing the futuristic saga with evolved production incorporating electronic and rock influences, and features from Damon Albarn and Killer Mike. This sequel maintained the original's conceptual depth, addressing themes of technological apocalypse and resistance.[53][54] Dan the Automator played a key production role on Gorillaz's self-titled debut album, released March 26, 2001, on Parlophone Records in the UK, co-producing tracks with Damon Albarn and integrating hip-hop elements into the virtual band's alternative rock framework. His contributions, including beats for songs like "Clint Eastwood" and "19-2000," helped blend genres and propelled the album's commercial success.[55][56] In the electro-pop duo Got a Girl, Dan the Automator partnered with actress and vocalist Mary Elizabeth Winstead to release I Love You But I Must Drive Off This Cliff Now on July 22, 2014, through Bulk Recordings. The album fused downtempo electronics, trip-hop, and indie pop, with Winstead's lyrics exploring romance and introspection over Automator's lush, cinematic arrangements.[57][58]EPs and singles
Dan the Automator's early EPs laid the foundation for his experimental hip hop style, emphasizing innovative sampling and breakbeats tailored for DJ culture. His debut release, Music to Be Murdered By (1989), was a vinyl EP of instrumental tracks blending electro influences with hip hop rhythms, created as a breaks record for parties and scratching sessions.[14][59] The following year, King of the Beats (1990) emerged as a 12-inch mini-album, showcasing boom bap instrumentals that highlighted his turntablism and production prowess on independent labels.[60][61] By the mid-1990s, A Better Tomorrow EP (1996) marked a maturation in his sound, released on Ubiquity Records with instrumental tracks that incorporated layered samples and foreshadowed his collaborative work in underground hip hop.[62][63] These early vinyl EPs, produced during his DJ beginnings in the Bay Area, remained influential in experimental hip hop circles without achieving mainstream chart success.[64] Notable standalone singles later in his career included "Bear Witness III (Once Again)" (2002), a 12-inch release featuring DJ Q-Bert's scratching over Automator's beats, which gained exposure through inclusion in the SSX 3 video game soundtrack and exemplified turntablism innovation.[65][66] In 2009, he revisited hip hop history with the Rapper's Delight (Remixed) EP, reworking The Sugarhill Gang's classic track through mixes like the Evian Mix and Van She Tech Remix, distributed digitally without significant chart performance but praised for bridging old-school rap with modern production.[67][68] These releases underscored his focus on shorter formats for creative experimentation beyond full-length projects.Production credits
Dan the Automator has earned acclaim for his production work on projects by other artists, particularly in left-field hip hop, indie rock, and genre-blending remixes, where he often layered eclectic samples and beats to create distinctive sonic landscapes. His contributions emphasize innovative fusion, drawing from hip hop, funk, and global influences without dominating as a lead artist. A pivotal early credit was his full production on Dr. Octagon's Dr. Octagonecologyst (1996), a groundbreaking album featuring Kool Keith's alter ego, characterized by surreal, sci-fi-themed beats that helped define alternative rap.[69][19] He handled production on select tracks for Cornershop's When I Was Born for the 7th Time (1997), including the breakthrough single "Brimful of Asha," blending British indie rock with Punjabi pop elements to achieve commercial success, including gold certification in the UK.[5][3] In 1998, Dan the Automator curated and produced the remix album Bombay the Hard Way: Guns, Cars and Sitars for the Indian composer duo Kalyanji–Anandji, reworking 1970s Bollywood funk, disco, and soul tracks with hip hop scratches and breaks, highlighting his interest in global remixing.[70][71] Beyond these, he produced individual tracks for artists like Kool Keith on solo efforts such as Sex Style (1997), where his beats amplified Keith's eccentric lyricism in underground hip hop circles.[72] For the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, he produced songs on Acme (1998), including "Talk About the Blues" and the Dr. John cover "Right Place, Wrong Time," infusing garage rock with electronic and hip hop textures.[73][74] Later, he took on full production for Kasabian's West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum (2009), a multi-platinum space rock album that topped the UK charts, and their follow-up Velociraptor! (2011), expanding his reach into mainstream rock.[5]| Artist | Release | Year | Role/Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dr. Octagon | Dr. Octagonecologyst | 1996 | Full album production; futuristic hip hop beats.[69] |
| Cornershop | When I Was Born for the 7th Time | 1997 | Production on select tracks, e.g., "Brimful of Asha."[5] |
| Kalyanji–Anandji | Bombay the Hard Way: Guns, Cars and Sitars | 1998 | Full remix production; Bollywood funk reworks.[70] |
| Kool Keith | Sex Style | 1997 | Production on select tracks; eccentric rap support.[72] |
| Jon Spencer Blues Explosion | Acme | 1998 | Production on tracks like "Talk About the Blues."[73] |
| Kasabian | West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum | 2009 | Full album production; chart-topping rock.[5] |
| Kasabian | Velociraptor! | 2011 | Full album production; genre-blending rock. |