Daniel Johnston, a singular voice in American songwriting, became a cult icon in the 1990s indie music scene through an extraordinary body of deeply personal, lo-fi recordings. Over the course of his life, he released more than thirty albums and built a devoted international following. Praised by critics and revered by artists from Kurt Cobain to Tom Waits, Johnston’s songs have been compared to the raw emotive force of Robert Johnson and the timeless storytelling of Hank Williams.
His influence can be traced to a series of homemade cassette tapes he began circulating in the early 1980s. These tapes—unfiltered, intimate, and hauntingly sincere—were the foundation of his mythos. Recognizing their importance, Jeff Tartakov began managing and signed Daniel to Stress Records in the mid-eighties to not only help distribute, manufacture, and preserve its handmade spirit but to help the music reach the broader world. Tartakov’s stewardship was instrumental in building Johnston’s legacy, and in defining the cassette as a vital medium for outsider music.
Much like the collapsible paint tube that sparked the Impressionist movement, the cassette tape democratized music-making, enabling untrained voices to share uncensored emotional truths. As a label founded on cassette releases, Joyful Noise is proud to present Daniel Johnston in the 20th Century, a definitive collection of 16 remastered cassette albums, lovingly restoredby longtime collaborator Kramer (Shimmy-Disc). The set is housed in a hand-crafted wooden case, screen-printed with Daniel’s artwork, hand-numbered in a limited edition of 999, and includes a soft vinyl Jeremiah The Innocent figure from the New York based art toy gallery Clutter in conjunction with LunchLady Studios.
Johnston’s work endures not only for its originality, but for its honesty—and its unmatched emotional reach. He remains the patron saint of lo-fi music and the unlikely hero of a generation seeking beauty in imperfection.