Fat Night's Dan Hanson on his ORL-to-CHI Transition
After I got off FaceTime with Dan Hanson--singer n' guitar player for ORL-to-CHI soul/R&B band Fat Night--me n' my ol' friend continued to chat up n' talk about his new life in Chicago. In this post interview dialogue, Dan told me a story that served as a great climax of his acclimation story, one that is laid out in the interview below. I wish it would've gotten captured, but I wanted to paraphrase the ending before you hear about the story that built up to it. EnJoY.
Dan went to an intimate 200ish person vinyl release show for Noname's Telefone. It happened to be on top of a roof and had an open bar. He ended up talking to a local trombone player that happened to be Frank Ocean's trombone player. When Noname first came onstage, she introduced her band and went back into the crowd to let them warm up the Chicago night and happened to start talking to Dan's new friend. Then Dan happened to be singing along to the D'Angelo song the band was playing ...ended up being pushed onstage by the 26-year-old rapper to finish the song.
Cover photo by Hannah Mae.
Photo by John Keen
matthew warhol: Yo dude, how’ve you been?
Dan Hanson: I’m pretty good.
matthew warhola: How do you like Chicago?
Dan Hanson: Chicago is pretty good. I’ve been up here for 9 or 10 months now.
matthew warhol: I can’t believe it’s been that long!
Dan Hanson: Yeah, time has flown by, and city life is definitely a lot quicker, more fast paced than home.
matthew warhol: What do you think the hardest thing to adapt to has been?
Dan Hanson: We moved in December so it was winter time and even though it was a mild winter, there was a lot to get used to. You do a lot of walking in general, getting better sneakers or boots that hold up as much walking as you do is important.
matthew warhol: Damn.
Dan Hanson: Also, the climate is dryer up here so I had noticed within the first few months my nose was so dry, and it would get cracked. Not to get to involved with that, but it was to the point where I was using lotion on parts of my body that I’ve never had to use lotion before. It was getting real dry.
matthew warhol: I think we should have a 45 minute long conversation about lotion [laughs] and dry noses… What do you think the cultural differences are? Are you as involved as you were in Orlando.
Dan Hanson: Not yet, it’s a little bit more expensive up here and there’s so much more going on, so you have to really figure out what’s attractive to you. I would say that I haven’t gotten to the ideal place where I want to be here, just because it takes time to get involved and get to the point where you start noticing the same faces and realize your a part of something. It’s a lot more established. Chicago being one of the birth places of blues and jazz, it’s pretty well instilled in the live music here.
matthew warhol: You were the last Fat Night to move up there, right?
Dan Hanson: Nik, our drummer, was actually the last one but he came up right after me.
matthew warhol: Did you feel like you were starting over in Chicago?
Dan Hanson: Not really, just because we played up here a few times already and once we did get up here, we started making our way into lineups pretty quickly. It was just kind of another step, rather than starting over, a bigger step rather than figuring the whole thing out again. It’s just on a bigger scale.
matthew warhol: Are you finding it easier to get into your own niche—where as Orlando, with the smaller amount of musicians, are you finding yourself in a pocket more?
Dan Hanson: Um, I think it is very easy to find a niche here. I don’t know if we’re there yet. We’re still open minded with shows that come our way, but there have been a couple of pretty cool shows. One was with Durand Jones & The Indications who is on Colemine Records. We have a record out onColemine and they’ve been on the up and up. They brought a sold out show to a really cool venue up here called The Empty Bottle. And the same thing happened with another band on the label called The Dip. It’s been really having connections like that where if someone comes through, we can be like, “Hey, we’re here if you’re interested.” That seems to be a lot of what we’ve gotten into since we’ve been here as apposed to putting together lead slots for shows. That’s the one big difference I’d say. We’re kind of back to square one, opening up for bands before we can start laying down our own thing up here.
Photo by Lara Warman