Dan Campbell | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Soupy, Aaron West |
Born | Lansdale, Pennsylvania | January 17, 1986
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
|
Years active | 2005–present |
Labels |
|
Daniel Jason "Soupy" Campbell[1] (born January 17, 1986) is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, and record producer from Lansdale, Pennsylvania. He is best known as the lead vocalist and songwriter for American pop punk band The Wonder Years, as well as the creator of folk punk project Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties.
Main article: The Wonder Years (band) |
Campbell was originally part of a band called The Premier, which he "thought had a lot of potential," but "kind of couldn't get a foothold on anything," and the members chose to break up and attend college.[2] The Wonder Years were supposed to be "just a fun thing to do on the side when we were bored."[2]
The band signed to No Sleep Records in 2007 and released their first full-length studio album, Get Stoked on It!, later that year. Campbell has largely disavowed the album, calling it an "unmitigated disaster."[3] Sophomore effort The Upsides (2010), was released to critical acclaim, and propelled the band to the forefront of the pop punk scene.[4]
Shortly after the release of The Upsides, the band signed to Hopeless Records, and released follow-up album Suburbia I've Given You All and Now I'm Nothing the next year. The Upsides, Suburbia, and The Greatest Generation (2013) together make up a trilogy of albums surrounding Campbell's struggles with fear, loneliness, and feeling lost.[5]
Campbell suffered writer's block following the release of The Greatest Generation, and decided that he didn't "want to write about the suburban American experience anymore."[6] Instead, the next Wonder Years album, No Closer to Heaven (2015), was a concept album surrounding the loss of a loved one.[7] The band's follow-up album, Sister Cities (2018), similarly follows a thematic link of unity.[8] Their most recent release, The Hum Goes On Forever (2022) is a stunning, beautiful, and honest reflection on parenthood and touches on themes from previous albums as well.[9][circular reference]
Main article: Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties |
In 2013, Campbell created an acoustic side project, Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties, in an attempt to hone his guitar abilities.[10] The project was originally intended to be a series of fictional vignettes, but he settled on writing "a whole album about one guy."[11] Campbell cited the Mountain Goats album All Hail West Texas and the Weakerthans album Reunion Tour as influences, speaking to how they created such real, whole characters that I found myself invested in their lives and their stories."[12]
The project's first album, We Don't Have Each Other, was released on July 8, 2014 via Hopeless to largely positive reviews.[13] The next year, Aaron West appeared as part of the Acoustic Basement segment of Warped Tour.[14] A follow-up EP, Bittersweet, was released May 20, 2016,[15] and the non-album single "Orchard Park" was released on October 5, 2017.[16] Most recently, the project's sophomore LP, Routine Maintenance was released May 10, 2019.[17]
Campbell helped produce British pop punk band Trash Boat's debut album, Nothing I Write You Can Change What You've Been Through (2016), and contributed a vocal feature to the track "Strangers".[18]
In 2018, Campbell and Ace Enders of The Early November announced Clear Eyes Fanzine, a "musical fanzine" dedicated to the TV show Friday Night Lights.[19] Their first EP, Season One, Episodes 1-6 (2019) featured three songs by Campbell and three by Enders.[20]
Campbell was one artist selected for ReRed (2019), a cover album of Taylor Swift's 2012 LP Red. Campbell sang "All Too Well" on the Something Merry compilation.[21]
On February 12, 2021, Campbell released his debut solo single, "When I Face Into the Wind."[22]
Much of Campbell's work references religion, specifically the Catholic Church. He attended Catholic school as a child, but was born to non-religious parents, describing his father as a "full-board atheist" and his mother as "a non-practicing Catholic who doesn't think about it much and doesn't go to church."[23] Campbell is critical of organized religion, saying in a 2011 interview with Alternative Press, "To me, there is no flaw in believing in God. If you want to believe in God, that's fine. Where I find a flaw is in being a part of this church that's basing itself off this convoluted text where you can't know everything, and it can't be 100 percent."[24]
Campbell graduated from the Temple University College of Education in 2011, and worked with K-12 students at Tanner G. Duckrey School and Joseph C. Ferguson School during his college career.[25]
Campbell and his wife Alison have two children together, Wyatt James Campbell, born April 9, 2019, and Jack August Campbell, born October 4, 2021.[26]
with The Wonder Years[edit]Studio albums
Compilation albums
Extended plays
Other appearances
|
with Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties[edit]Studio albums
Extended plays
Live albums
Non-album singles
with Clear Eyes Fanzine[edit]Extended plays
Solo[edit]Non-album singles
Albums
As featured artist
Compilations
|