The Octopus Project began in 1999 as an experiment between three college friends, Toto Miranda, Yvonne Lambert & Josh Lambert. Having been in guitar-based indie rock bands together for a few years, the trio wanted to branch out and try a new approach at music-making—one that incorporated all of their disparate influences and had no rules. 2002 saw the release of their debut album,
Identification Parade, on
Peek-A-Boo Records after label head, Travis Higdon, witnessed them at only one show & immediately signed them. The band toured relentlessly for the next few years, releasing their second album,
One Ten Hundred Thousand Million to great acclaim in 2005. The band continued touring throughout 2005, headlining venues all across the US and landing opening gigs for folks like
...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead. On April 30, 2006, The Octopus Project performed at
Coachella. They were offered the opportunity after a fan, unbeknownst to the band, entered them in a contest held by the festival on
MySpace in which voters were to "nominate their favorite band for an open slot at the festival". On October 31, 2006,
Graveface Records released
The House of Apples and Eyeballs -- a collaborative album between the band &
Black Moth Super Rainbow. In January 2007, they holed up in
Bear Creek Studio outside of Seattle to record their third album,
Hello, Avalanche. The album was released to great fanfare on October 9, 2007—garnering praise from music gatekeepers from
Pitchfork to
Rolling Stone.
David Fricke described the band as, "smart pop scientists and total party animals, like Stereolab with happy feet," and proclaimed them as one of his top
SXSW picks that year. The band went on to support underground hip hop star
Aesop Rock and indie electronic icons
Stereo Total on their national tours that fall. In 2008, the group performed at notable festivals such as
Lollapalooza,
All Tomorrow's Parties, and the
Austin City Limits Festival. Also in 2008, the band released a 7" single on
Too Pure as a part of the famed label's music club series. In February 2009, The Octopus Project composed and performed a series of unique, individual scores for short films played at
Alamo Drafthouse in
Austin, Texas. For their performance at the
SXSW festival in March 2010, the band put together a multi-media show which involved them performing material from what was to be their upcoming release,
Hexadecagon. The band performed surrounded by eight loudspeakers, while eight projectors projected videos corresponding to the music on tent ceilings above the stage and the audience. Later that same year, the Octopus Project played at
Moogfest in
Asheville, North Carolina. They were scheduled to play just prior to
Devo's headlining set. Three days prior to the concert, Devo's guitarist, Bob Mothersbaugh, severely injured his hand and was unable to play. Since the band was receiving a Moog Innovation Award at the festival, and because they didn't want to disappoint their fans, the remaining two members of Devo enlisted the help of The Octopus Project, and together the two bands performed the Devo songs "Girl U Want" and "Beautiful World." In 2011, the band snagged the opening spot on tours with
Devo,
Man or Astroman, and
Explosions in the Sky. The band spent the rest of that year working on soundtracks for the feature film
Kid-Thing, and the video game
Thunderbeam. In 2012, The Octopus Project began work on what would be their fifth studio album,
Fever Forms. The first single from the album, "Whitby", was released as an EP in November—complete with b-sides, a karaoke version, and a video directed by the band. In 2014, the band was awarded The Special Jury Award for Musical Score at the
Sundance Film Festival for their work on the soundtrack to the film,
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter. In 2015, the band released two EPs of new music paired with handmade art objects—the first, Mister, a stuffed animal & the second, Nelda, a resin sculpture. Excited about the new tunes, the band dove into writing what would become their next record, 2017's
Memory Mirror. The album was mixed and recorded by
Dave Fridmann and
Danny Reisch. On June 22, 2018, the band released the soundtrack for the film
Damsel (a western directed by the Zellner Bros., starring
Robert Pattinson &
Mia Wasikowska) on
Milan Records. Produced on period specific instruments—banjo, musical saw, acoustic guitar, flute, wine glasses—the score finds the band in unknown territory sounding at once both haunting and majestic.
The New York Times called the score "marvelously weird," while
Consequence of Sound dubbed it "brilliant," and
Entertainment Weekly said, "The real heart of the movie is the unearthly score from The Octopus Project." 2019 saw the band expanding further into art installation territory, with LOOM II—an immersive, ambient surround sound & surround light performance, which premiered at the
Fusebox Festival in Austin, TX. 2020 & 2021 was spent working on the scores for the dark comedy film
The Disappearance of Toby Blackwood and a documentary about
Reading Rainbow entitled
Butterfly In the Sky. The former, a percussion-forward outing & the latter, a deep-dive into the universe of 70's PBS synth sounds. In December 2021, the band was invited to perform their song,
"I Saw the Bright Shinies," at the
Moog Sound Lab to unveil their newest Etherwave
Theremin. In 2022, the band began working on the music that would become the score for
Sasquatch Sunset, which premiered at the
2024 Sundance Film Festival. The film's closing credits song,
"The Creatures of Nature," is sung by
Riley Keough and written by The Octopus Project & director,
David Zellner. On December 2, 2022, the band released an EP of covers entitled
"I Want Vikram." ==Members==