Tonto's Expanding Head Band's first album,
Zero Time, was released in 1971 on the U.S.
Embryo label (distributed by
Atlantic Records) and attracted much attention.
Stevie Wonder in particular was impressed enough to subsequently feature TONTO in his albums starting with
Music of My Mind and continuing through
Talking Book,
Innervisions, ''
Fulfillingness' First Finale and Jungle Fever
; all projects which listed Margouleff and Cecil as associate producers, engineers and programmers (and winning them an engineering Grammy for Innervisions''). Wonder said: :"How great it is at a time when technology and the science of music is at its highest point of evolution, to have the reintroduction of two of the most prominent forefathers in this music be heard again. It can be said of this work that it parallels with good wine. As it ages it only gets better with time. A toast to greatness... a toast to
Zero Time... forever." Writing in
Keyboard Magazine in 1984, John Diliberto asserted that: :"... this collaboration changed the perspectives of black pop music as much as
the Beatles'
Sgt. Pepper altered the concept of white rock". The remainder of the 1970s and 1980s saw TONTO featured on albums from
Quincy Jones,
Bobby Womack,
the Isley Brothers,
Steve Hillage,
Billy Preston, and
Weather Report, as well as releases from
Stephen Stills,
the Doobie Brothers,
Dave Mason,
Little Feat,
Joan Baez, and others. TONTO was also used in Brian De Palma's 1974 movie
Phantom of the Paradise as well as appearing on-screen. A second TONTO album, ''It's About Time'', was released in 1974. The vocalist Gil Scott-Heron and keyboardist Brian Jackson enlisted Cecil and TONTO for the production of their collaborative album,
1980 (1980). Scott-Heron and Jackson were featured on the album cover, posing with the synthesizer. In 1996 a compilation album,
TONTO Rides Again, was released, featuring all of
Zero Time plus all of the tracks from ''It's About Time'', although the latter tracks appeared with new titles. In the liner notes to the re-release, Mark Mothersbaugh wrote: :"Once upon a time, TONTO represented the cutting edge of artificial intelligence in the world of music - Robert and Malcolm are the mad chefs of aural cuisine with beefy tones and cheesy timbres, making brain chili for those brave enough and hungry enough. Consequently, back in the cultural wasteland of the Midwest, the release of Tonto's Expanding Head Band was an inspirational indicator for starving Spudboys who had grown tired of the soup du jour. It was official - noise was now Muzak, and Muzak was now noise. So with TONTO "riding again" and the orb-of-sound resurrected, expect a healing. The masses are asses who need TONTO's glasses. Lookout, here comes TONTO!" The 2017 incremental game
Universal Paperclips used the track
Riversong, from the album
Zero Time, as a space battle
threnody. ==Virtual TONTO Live==