Telefon Tel Aviv’s rewriting of electronica’s rulebook stems from its remix resume of artists including Nine Inch Nails, Eminem, David Bowie and A Perfect Circle. They’ve also scored the films “New ...
In January, the passing of Charlie Cooper, one half of the electronic duo Telefon Tel Aviv, put the musical future of that group in question. In February, their third record, Immolate Yourself, came ...
Telefon Tel Aviv, which blends ambient noise with industrial distortion, is headed to San Antonio for a show at Paper Tiger on Thursday, February 6. The solo act, comprised of founder Joshua Eustis, ...
With Map of What Is Effortless, Telefon Tel Aviv marks a radical departure from the opaque ambiance of its 2001 debut, Fahrenheit Fair Enough, toward a rich brew of soul and IDM electronics. Much of ...
Joshua Eustis brought Telefon Tel Aviv out of retirement in 2016, which was the first time since the tragic death of his musical partner, Charlie Cooper, back in 2009. He’s now back with the first new ...
Holed up in his home studio wearing sweatpants and drinking tea, Joshua Eustis makes no promises that he’ll ever finish the new Telefon Tel Aviv record. Fans of the electronic musician’s work credit ...
Telefon Tel Aviv’s work has always been cinematic. The group’s previous albums sound as if they were the soundtracks to some visually stunning art film — the scenes and overall plot play out in your ...
10 years ago, Telefon Tel Aviv, the glitched-out Chicago-based electronic duo, ended in about the saddest way possible. News came out that Charles Cooper, one half of the duo, had died at the age of ...
spoons up heaping portions of warm, soothing synth tones over light, crisp breakbeats and blippy, chirping percussive sounds. Along the way, the act touches on some light classical influences and a ...
Since the passing of Charlie Cooper in 2009, Telefon Tel Aviv’s other half Josh Eustis has remained active by recording with Puscifer, touring with Nine Inch Nails, and writing under the name Sons Of ...
Telefon Tel Aviv's defection to Chicago in 2001 was a sad emblem of New Orleans' inability to support progressive bands in its own backyard. Tonight, amid a much-improved climate here ...
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