Try it free Discover bookstores Case studies Pricing Help

Telefon Tel Aviv Live

Saturday, July 30, 2022 at 9:00 PM

$10 - $25
Online tickets not available

Saturday, July 30 at 9PM

Telefon Tel Aviv Live

2665 Mission St, San Francisco, CA 94110, USA

$10 - $25
Online tickets not available
Out of concern for the health and safety of our local communities and employees, this event has been postponed to July 30, 2022.
------
Telefon Tel Aviv returns to Gray Area to perform a new live audiovisual performance. Frontman Josh Eustis combines atmospheric soundscapes with visceral, ambient visuals touring on the album “Dreams Are Not Enough,” released in September 2019 on Ghostly International. The album and performance are seen through the lens of a dream, both in terms of its sound and its emotional content. Fears are processed and long-held desires are realized. The album and track titles refer to a recurring dream Eustis has, based on a "murky incident during a family vacation to a remote Alabama coastline.

Telefon Tel Aviv is an experimental electronic duo formed in 1999 by two New Orleans high-school friends, Joshua Eustis and Charles Cooper. Following years of playing in various local bands and learning the ropes of electronic music production, Eustis and Cooper wrote the demos for what would become Telefon Tel Aviv in 1999. After sending them to John Hughes III, who operated the Chicago-based Hefty Records, they were offered an album deal in January 2000. They spent the rest of that year writing their debut album, Fahrenheit Fair Enough, released in September 2001, as well as the soundtrack for the movie New Port South, written by Hughes’ brother James and released the same year. Shaped by a diverse set of influences that included British electronic music (Autechre, Aphex Twin, Jega) and Black American music (house, techno, bounce rap), Telefon Tel Aviv were the latest in a growing lineup of American musicians that sought to carve their own lane and add something meaningful to a growing international conversation about what the meeting point between hip-hop, soul, and electronic music could be. But while Eustis and Cooper emerged within a specific context that provided their continuing work with a solid foundation, they spent the next decade taking risks and grappling with the idea of what an electronic duo could be.
In 2004, they released their second LP, Map Of What Is Effortless, a bold attempt at solidifying the romantic elements of their debut into a modern r&b sound and featuring vocal contributions from Damon Aaron and Lindsay Anderson. Three years later, Hefty released a compilation of Telefon Tel Aviv remixes that included their take on Nine Inch Nails, Ammoncontact, Slicker, and Apparat among others. In 2009, ten years after they first began working together, the duo returned with Immolate Yourself, via Ellen Alien’s BPitch Control label. Darker and synth-driven, this third album took yet another dramatic left turn, this time towards a more unabashedly pop-minded sound. In between the German and U.S. release of Immolate, Charles Cooper passed away unexpectedly. Following Cooper’s death the Telefon Tel Aviv project went on hold. In 2014, Eustis released a solo album on Audraglint Recordings as Sons of Magdalene called Move To Pain. After years of self-doubt, Eustis decided to revive the Telefon Tel Aviv alias in 2016. This return coincides with a reissue of the debut album on Ghostly International and Eustis’ first live shows under the name, which began in the spring of 2016 with a North American tour alongside Moderat. New material under the Telefon Tel Aviv moniker is currently being written.
place View on map
Withfriends believes in building financial resilience for indie bookstores through community support.
Learn more
Share with friends link
Support Gray Area
Become a member and receive insider benefits
Learn more