Daniel Loyd(I)
- Editor
- Producer
- Editorial Department
Born in the Bronx, New York, in 1976, Daniel Loyd spent his early life
in both New York and Texas. From Memorial High School in Houston and
Fordham Preparatory School in the Bronx, he went on to the University
of Texas at Austin, where he was active in theatre and the campus
television station, then known as KVR9. While at the station, he
produced "The Austin Outer Limits", a weekly program dedicated to the
music scene in Austin, a city known affectionately as the live music
capitol of the world. Appearing on the program were such bands as Bo
Bud Greene, Mumbeskinny, and Magneto USA. As Treasurer and Historian of
the short-lived theatre production company, Rare Creations, he helped
produce versions of Tom Stoppard's "Rosencrantz and Guilderstern are
Dead" and Ayn Rand's "Night of January 16th."
After graduating with a film degree in 1998, he was off to Los Angeles to become a film editor. As an electric bass player, he has counted himself a member of a number of rock groups, including the Houston-based groups Dark Harmony and Indecision, the Austin-based group Clarke Nova, which released two EPs, including 1997's "Self-Titled" and 1998's "Library Music" through Silent City Productions.
In the early 1990s, he played with the immortal absurdist punk band Dead Yeti on their song "Lane 13." He now plays bass for the Los Angeles-based group, Human Life Index.
After graduating with a film degree in 1998, he was off to Los Angeles to become a film editor. As an electric bass player, he has counted himself a member of a number of rock groups, including the Houston-based groups Dark Harmony and Indecision, the Austin-based group Clarke Nova, which released two EPs, including 1997's "Self-Titled" and 1998's "Library Music" through Silent City Productions.
In the early 1990s, he played with the immortal absurdist punk band Dead Yeti on their song "Lane 13." He now plays bass for the Los Angeles-based group, Human Life Index.