Incubus Einziger co-founded Incubus with
Calabasas High School classmates Brandon Boyd, Jose Pasillas II, and Alex Katunich in 1991. Incubus has sold over 23 million albums worldwide He has sporadically continued to compose background music for films. In 2003 Einziger contributed to Ziggy Marley's debut solo album
Dragonfly alongside fellow Incubus member Chris Kilmore as well as
Flea and
John Frusciante of
Red Hot Chili Peppers. Einziger also expanded into the realm of video games when he and his bandmates worked on the soundtrack of the popular game
Halo 2, writing a 26-minute song that also featured Flea on trumpet. In 2006 Einziger produced the debut album "Red Rover" by Agent Sparks; a collaboration with younger brothers Benjamin Einziger and Paul Fried. In 2007, Einziger produced
Nighttiming, the debut album of long-time friend and former
Phantom Planet drummer and actor
Jason Schwartzman's
Coconut Records project. The album featured appearances by
Kirsten Dunst,
Zooey Deschanel, and Robert Schwartzman, and was recorded at Einziger's own home studio in
Malibu, CA (Casa Chica).
End.>vacuum Einziger began crafting an orchestral composition "End.>vacuum" following surgery in March 2007 for
carpal tunnel syndrome, a repetitive-strain injury to his left wrist. The condition forced him to take a hiatus from the band and his instrument. The piece consisted of nine musical movements (approximately 40 minutes total) and was performed by a chamber orchestra led by renowned Los Angeles conductor and Einziger's longtime collaborator Suzie Katayama. Inspiration has been attributed to such iconoclastic modern and avant-garde composers as
Igor Stravinsky,
George Antheil,
George Crumb,
Samuel Barber,
Krzysztof Penderecki and
Frank Zappa. According to Einziger, "End.>vacuum" makes reference to his perception of the outer edge of human understanding, "the finite place where rational scientific knowledge stops and pure speculation ensues…The event horizon between what we know and what we don't know is what keeps me awake at night, but also gets me out of bed every day." "Einziger's work plays with time."
Los Angeles Times' Steve Hochman proclaimed, "Pulsating tribal/mechanical rhythms melt into sustained, almost static stretches before the rhythm reemerges. The early-'80s large ensemble work of
John Adams comes to mind, but the character of the piece is Einziger's own." End.>vacuum was Einziger's first original orchestral composition. It debuted at
UCLA's famed
Royce Hall on August 23, 2008.
Harvard and studies Einziger has studied the history and philosophy of physics with physicist/historian, Dr. Peter Galison, of Harvard University. He has a profound interest in the physical sciences. In 2008 he contributed to an article on the topic of human evolution with evolutionary biology figure and Brown University professor Dr. Kenneth Miller. On June 17, 2008, Einziger took a personal tour of the
Large Hadron Collider at
CERN in
Geneva, Switzerland with British physicist
Dr. Brian Cox. During that visit, Einziger invited Dr. Cox to appear as a speaker at his concert for later that Fall.
Other works In 2009, Einziger orchestrated and recorded the additional strings for the
Thirty Seconds to Mars third album
This Is War. In 2012 Einziger began working with
progressive house artist
Avicii on the EDM producer's song "
Wake Me Up!" for his debut studio album
True. Einziger helped premiere the song live at
Ultra 15 along with bandmates
Jose Pasillas,
Ben Kenney and country music legend
Mac Davis. As of July 2013, the song reached No. 1 on the charts in 39 countries. Einziger also worked on music for
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 with
Hans Zimmer,
Pharrell Williams,
Johnny Marr and
David A. Stewart. == Musical influences ==