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Tally Hall

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Tally Hall
Place of Origin Ann Arbor, Michigan (USA)
Genres Rock, Indie Rock
Years Active 2002-Present
Label Quack! (2005-2007, 2011)
Atlantic Records (2007-2010)
Needlejuice Records (Present)
Website Official Website
Tally Hall's YouTube
Tally Hall's Twitter
Tally Hall's Facebook
Band Members
Joe Hawley: Vocals, Guitar
Rob Cantor: Vocals, Guitar
Ross Federman: Drums/Percussion
Andrew Horowitz: Keyboards, percussion, vocals
Zubin Sedghi:Vocals, Bass
Past Members
Steve Gallagher: Drums/Percussion
Honorary Members
Bora Karaca: Bora Karaca
Touring Members
Casey Shea: Guitar
Jeremy Kittel: Violin
Bora Karaca: Accordion, Keyboard, Guitar
Related Acts
edu: Andrew's solo
ミラクルミュージカル: Joe's side project
Rob Cantor: Rob's solo
Joe Hawley: Joe's solo
Mr. F: Ross' DJ mash-ups

Tally Hall is an American rock band formed in December 2002 in Ann Arbor, Michigan and is often recognized by their trademark colored ties. They currently signed to Needlejuice Records but have also been under the indie label Quack! Media in the past (2005-2007, 2011), as well as Atlantic Records (2007-2010) who helped finance and nationally re-distribute their studio debut album, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum.

The band is made up of 5 members:

Rob Cantor
Rob Cantor
Yellow Tie - Vocals/Guitar
Joe Hawley
Joe Hawley
Red Tie - Vocals/Guitar
Andrew Horowitz
Andrew Horowitz
Green Tie - Keyboards/Vocals
Zubin Sedghi
Zubin Sedghi
Blue Tie - Vocals/Bass Guitar
Ross Federman
Ross Federman
Grey Tie - Percussion

History

Andrew Horowitz, the only member not originally from Michigan, began writing songs when he was eight years old and eventually headed to the University of Michigan to study composition. There he met Rob Cantor and Zubin Sedghi, who both attended the same high school and played in a band called listedBlack. The three formed a band (name unknown) and played small shows around the University of Michigan dorms, where all 5 members went to school.

Rob met Joe Hawley on campus and as they began to become friendly, Rob learned of Joe's musical abilities and asked him and Steve Gallagher to join the band as lead guitarist and drummer, respectively. Later, they played a few gigs under the name Gallagher and then as 540 (the address of their house at the time). Joe originally suggested the name of the band be "Tally Hall" and everyone agreed (except Andrew, who was not from the area and didn't grasp the magic of what the REAL Tally Hall meant to people in the Detroit area).

Tally Hall was the name of an indoor shopping plaza/food court on Orchard Lake Road in Farmington Hills, Michigan. It was developed by Mel Rosenhaus (1925-2011) and, according to Mr. Rosenhaus' eulogy, was the first food court in Michigan. A wondrous arcade/museum of coin-op machines and oddities called Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum was a popular establishment within Tally Hall and is now all that remains after the Tally Hall complex was torn down.

Eventually, they all agreed to name the band Tally Hall and they began to record some EP's and play small shows around the UofM campus.

The matching wardrobe/colored ties first started around November 2003.

In 2004, when Steve left the band, they recruited Ross Federman, who went to high school with Joe.

In 2005, the band would sign with up-and-coming multimedia company and record label Quack!Media for funding and the release of their first studio album, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum. Joe stated they needed to partner with a label to progress as a band together and Al McWilliams happened to accept their request of a record deal.[1]

From 2005 until 2010, the band was managed by The Hornblow Group (They Might Be Giants, OK Go) but they changed management in Spring/Summer of 2010 to Stiletto Entertainment.

In 2011, the band was released from Atlantic Records and went back to Quack! Media to release their 2nd full-length album, Good & Evil.

On the Tally Hall website, there have been two biographies posted; one in 2006[2] and one in 2008, the latter of which is written by friend of the band Bernie J. Michael, who is not fictitious.[3][4]

2006 Bio

2008 Bio

Complete Demos

The LP known as Complete Demos is essentially just a compilation of the songs they recorded for the two EPs they previously released (Party Boobytrap & Welcome To Tally Hall) with the addition of the unnamed hidden track, referred to as Hidden In The Sand. But unlike the EPs, they put effort into manufacturing & packaging and officially released the album on November 11th, 2004. The CD was sold at shows and through their website for about a year. The album was then considered out of print and hard to find until December 2015 when they uploaded it and made it available to purchase through Bandcamp. [5]

Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum

2005

The band began touring outside their general hometown area in 2005, promoting this album, which was initially released in November 2005 under the Quack! Media label in Ann Arbor, MI. Their shows mostly featuring tracks from the album. However, their live concerts often feature a couple cover songs. They're probably best known for their cover of Biz Markie's "Just A Friend", which they used to end every set with but it's not played too often anymore.

A live version of Just a Friend can be found on The Pingry EP released in 2005. Later, In 2006, a studio version was recorded and shelved -- because the band was not happy with it -- but later was released as one of a few bonus songs provided by Atlantic Records for their 2008 re-release of MMMM. These bonus songs (Just A Friend, Mucka Blucka, and Dream) were distributed via download codes handed out at live shows and through the Twitter account of hiddeninthesand.com (A.K.A. HITS).

2006

Quack! Media re-released the album in September 2006 with more focused marketing behind it and a wider distribution plan. It helped get them into more stores and gained them more national attention, including impressing radio personality Mancow enough for him to recommend Craig Ferguson listen to the album. Soon after, on August 2, 2006, they were performing their song "Good Day" on The Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson. In September 2006, Tally Hall appeared in MTV's segment "You Hear It First."

2008

After signing to Atlantic Records, the band released Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum for the 3rd time on April 1, 2008 with their new record label, but this time they were given the opportunity to re-record and re-mix parts they've never been quite satisfied with and allow a more experienced engineer to gear the songs in a radio-friendlier manner, though the songs did not gain much more radio airplay. In addition to the album, Atlantic Records produced Tally Hall's Internet Show, which was intended to coincide with the release of the album but due to some musical licensing issues, there was a delay and the Internet Show didn't get started until September 2008.

The band also appeared at a few South by Southwest Music Festivals and on August 3, 2008, Tally Hall was a performer on the BMI stage at Lollapalooza.

Tally Hall was invited back by The Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson on September 16, 2008 to help promote the launch of Tally Hall's Internet Show. They performed a "radio edit" version of "Welcome to Tally Hall" in newly donned black vests over top of their traditional colored ties, white shirts, and black pants. This was the first time the vests were worn.

The band worked on several projects after the completion of "Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum", including covering the song "Smile Like You Mean It" by The Killers for the sixth The O.C. soundtrack: Music from The OC: Mix 6. They also recorded a song in 2009 called Light And Night featuring Nellie McKay as a free download, distributed by Walmart, when people bought the book "The Magician's Elephant."

Good & Evil

Tally Hall's second album Good & Evil was released on June 12, 2011[6]

Post-Good & Evil

Tally Hall went on hiatus in fall 2011, but the band members have worked on other personal and musical endeavors.

In March of 2012, Andrew Horowitz released sketches under the name edu. This album would be released only as a cassette tape until December of the same year, where it was released digitally. The album featured Rob Cantor on HEY YOU!.

In 2012 Joe Hawley, Ross Federman, and Bora Karaca released Hawaii: Part II under the name ミラクルミュージカル, (Miracle Musical).

In 2014 Rob Cantor released his solo album Not A Trampoline, and the now-famous Shia LaBeouf Live single and music video.

In 2016, Joe Hawley would start a PledgeMusic project for funding a solo album. This would be released as Joe Hawley Joe Hawley in the same year.

On December 13th, 2018, as part of ミラクルミュージカル's Reddit AMA, when asked whether Tally Hall is still around, Ross answered: "Tally Hall still exists. Touring isn't possible at this very moment. That's about the only update".[7]

On May 30, 2019, Andrew Horowitz would start a Kickstarter to produce vinyl and CDs of his album sketches. However, sketches would be remixed, remastered, and retitled to sketches 3d. On June 30, 2019, he hit his Kickstarter goal.[8]

On July 26, 2019 Andrew released sketches 3d digitally and would start to ship out backers physical copies. CDs and vinyl would later be listed on Andrew's store as he had some left over.

On November 6th, 2019, the official Tally Hall Twitter announced that their songs would be available on AMI digital jukeboxes. [9]

Sometime in late 2020, the band would sign with Needlejuice Records, who would announce and open pre-orders for a reissue of Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum in early 2021. The pre-orders opening would crash their website and prevent some from pre-ordering the album. A EP combining Just a Friend and some bonus tracks would be announced as well and released alongside the reissue. Good & Evil is currently planned to be reissued before the end of 2022, but there are no set-in-stone dates for when this will be. The album will be released alongside a EP of Good & Evil-era non-album tracks.

Discography

LPs

EPs

Compilations

Singles

Promotional CDs

Miscellaneous Collections Of Songs

Side Projects, Solo Albums, & Old Bands

Equipment List

The following is a list of equipment the members of Tally Hall use or have used. For a more comprehensive list, see https://equipboard.com/band/tally-hall.

Percussion

  • Ross plays a 5-piece Pearl Reference kit in Granite Sparkle.

Drum sizes:

  • 22x18 bass drum
  • 10x8 tom
  • 12x9 tom
  • 16x16 floor tom
  • 14x6.5 snare drum
  • Primero Pro 7"/8.5 bongo

He also uses a Roland SPD-S sampler to trigger samples throughout the show.

Guitars

Joe:

Primary electric guitars:

  • Rickenbacker 330 (Main from 2007-2011, sometimes used as backup for the Strat around 2007/8)
  • Fender Stratocaster (Main from 2003-2007, additional Strat used as backup early on)

Both guitars would be played through a Fender Hot Rod Deville, Joe would also use a Boss GT-8 multi-effect processor.

Primary acoustic guitars:

  • Seagull S6 (Main from 2005-2011, shared with Rob early on before he switched to a Gibson acoustic)
  • Taylor 214 (Used at some acoustic sets as well as in studio for Good & Evil)
  • Takamine G-Series (Used at some acoustic sets)

Rob:

Primary electric guitars:

  • Gibson Les Paul (Main from 2007-2011)
  • Fender Stratocaster (Main from 2003-2007, also used in 2010 and 2011 for Out In The Twilight)

Both guitars would be played through a Vox AC30, Rob would also use a Boss GT-6 multi-effect processor.

Primary acoustic guitars:

  • Gibson J-185 EC (Main from 2007-2011)
  • Seagull S6 (Main from 2003-2007, shared with Joe before switching to the Gibson)

Bass Guitars

  • Fender Jaguar Bass (Zubin's main from 2007-2011)
  • Fender Jazz Bass (Zubin's main from 2003-2007, additional brought as backup from 2006-2011)

Both basses would be played through an Ampeg Classic Series SVT450H head with a Classic Series SVT 410HLF cabinet, Zubin would also use a Boss GT-6B multi-effect unit.

Keyboards

  • Yamaha S90 ES (Andrew's main from 2005-2011)
  • Kurzweil PC2x (Andrew's main from 2003-2005, switched to the Yamaha between the 12/15 and 12/17 concerts in 2005)
  • Alesis ION (2005-2011, used alongside the Yamaha or Kurzweil)

These keyboards would be played through a Roland KC-550 amp. Andrew would also use a Roland SP404 sampler to trigger samplers and enable vocal pitch shifting, as well as Apple's Logic Mainstage keyboard software starting in 2009.

Mics

The boys sing through Sennheiser e935 vocal microphones. Ross prefers Sennheiser e904 tom microphones.

References