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Daniel Wherrett (July 8, 1968 – March 2026), known by his stage name DJ Dan, was an American house DJ and producer.[1][2]

Life and career

Wherrett was born in Olympia, Washington, on July 8, 1968,[3] and grew up in Lacey, Washington. He moved to Seattle from 1988 to 1990 to study fashion, where he discovered electronic dance music at clubs such as The Underground, where he heard Randy Schlager and Donald Glaude, and started experimenting with this music himself.[citation needed]

In 1991, he moved to Los Angeles. After playing a few events with LA-based DJ Ron D Core, with whom he released a series of mixtapes and live mixes, he made his way to San Francisco in 1993 where he joined Funky Tekno Tribe. In 1996, he partnered with Jim Hopkins, releasing Loose Caboose under the name Electroliners. This track was picked up by DJs such as Carl Cox, Sasha, John Digweed, and Lee Burridge. Pete Tong played Wherrett’s first Essential Mix in 1998, with a follow-up in 1999, and again in 2007 with Frankie Knuckles at the Winter Music Conference.

In 2000, Carl Cox invited Wherrett on his tour. In the same year, Wherrett’s track “That Zipper Track” was released on four labels worldwide, and went on to sell over 100,000 copies on vinyl. In 2001, he created his own label, InStereo Recordings.

DJ Mag named DJ Dan the No. 1 House DJ in 2006. URB magazine named him “America’s Favorite DJ” and “America’s Hardest Working DJ”. In 2014, he was rated the No. 9 DJ in the US according to the DJ Times’ “America’s Best DJ” Poll.[4][5]

On March 29, 2026, it was announced that Wherrett had died at the age of 57; he had not made a scheduled appearance at the Spring Ball at Dead Ringer Analog Bar in Reno, Nevada on March 28.[3][6][7]

Discography

Singles

  • DJ Dan & Hatiras – Baked From Scratch (Blow Media)
  • DJ Dan – Bam (InStereo)
  • DJ Dan and Grandadbob – Disco Hertz EP (Faith and Hope Recordings)
  • DJ Dan – Transformers Cartoon Theme (Hasbro)
  • DJ Dan – Get Up (Kinetic)
  • DJ Dan & Bryan Cox – It’s Getting Closer (Ammo)
  • DJ Dan & Hatiras – Love for the Weekend (Blow Media)
  • DJ Dan Presents Needle Damage – That Zipper Track (Moonshine) – UK No. 53[8]
  • DJ Dan – Needle Damage Remixes (Audacious)
  • DJ Dan – Put That Record Back On (Kinetic)
  • DJ Dan – Put That Record Back On (Part 1) (Honchos)
  • DJ Dan – Put That Record Back On (Part 2) (Honchos)
  • DJ Dan – Rock to the Rhythm (Audacious)
  • DJ Dan – That Phone Track (Subliminal)
  • DJ Dan & Dano – That Arrival (Red Melon Records)
  • DJ Dan Presents Future Retro – Evolution 1 (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan Presents Future Retro – Evolution 2 (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan Presents Future Retro – Evolution 3 (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan Presents Future Retro – Fascinated (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan – In Your Area (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan – Work That Sucka/Whores Play (Rising)
  • DJ Dan – Stereo Damage (Hotfingers)
  • DJ Dan – Nasty Night Out EP (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & Bartouze – Jukebox (InStereo Recordings)
  • DJ Dan – House All Night (PornoStar Records)
  • DJ Dan – Baby Boomer (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Don’t Hold Back (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Just A Fool (Dub Mix) (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Reckless Gurl (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – In Your Area 2012 Edit (Nettwerk)
  • DJ Dan & Brian Matrix – More Damage (Heartfelt Sounds)
  • DJ Dan – Fist Pump Broken (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Disco Dancing (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Where You Come From (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & Brian Matrix – Africa (Hotfingers)
  • DJ Dan – Out of Nowhere (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – American Girls American Girls (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Ghost (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – The Edge (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – The Real Deal (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Love Is Stronger (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Party People (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – Chunka Funk (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Mighty High (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – I Got It (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan – French Dish (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Don’t Hold Back (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & Umek – Mighty Wind (Toolroom)
  • DJ Dan & Phunk Investigation – Can You Hear It (Phunk Traxx)
  • DJ Dan & Oscar L – Feel The Panic (Toolroom)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Mighty High (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & DJ Mes – Where You Come From (Guesthouse)
  • DJ Dan & Groovebox – Half Steppin’ (Work Records)
  • DJ Dan & Simon Doty – Disco Slice (Toolroom)
  • DJ Dan & Simon Doty – Smash The Disco (Toolroom)
  • DJ Dan & Phunk Investigation – Everybody Over There (InStereo Recordings)
  • DJ Dan – Don’t Disturb This Groove (InStereo Recordings)

[9]

Studio albums

  • Future Retro (Nettwerk, 2010)
  • Disco Funk Odyssey (Guesthouse Music, 2013)
  • Nothing But A Party (InStereo Recordings, 2014)

[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ Phares, Heather; Potts, Diana. “Biography: DJ Dan”. AllMusic. Retrieved May 4, 2010.
  2. ^ Bain, Katie (March 29, 2026). “DJ Dan, Legendary West Coast House Producer, Confirmed Dead”. Billboard. Retrieved March 30, 2026.
  3. ^ a b Woodward, Alexander (March 29, 2026). “DJ Dan, legendary house music pioneer, dies at 57”. Art Threat. Retrieved March 30, 2026.
  4. ^ “Bio”. Djdan.com. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  5. ^ “Markus Schulz Voted America’s Best DJ 2014”. Archived from the original on October 14, 2014. Retrieved October 9, 2014.
  6. ^ Brown, August (March 30, 2026). “DJ Dan, pioneer of West Coast rave culture, dies at 57”. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 30, 2026.
  7. ^ Vaziri (March 30, 2026). “DJ Dan, San Francisco house pioneer, dies at 57”. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 30, 2026.
  8. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 159. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  9. ^ “DJ Dan Tracks on Beatport”. Beatport.com.
  10. ^ “DJ Dan Releases on Beatport”. Beatport.com.