Typhoon was formed in
Portland, Oregon in 2005 by high-school friends Kyle Morton, Toby Tanabe and Dave Hall who had relocated from
Salem, Oregon. The band's name, originally a
working title, references a dinner conversation Kyle, Toby and Dave shared in
Japan as teenagers. Typhoon's self-titled debut album was recorded and self-released in 2005. Over the following five years, the band was active in the Portland house party scene and incorporated new members from the Portland music community in its lineup. During this period, they released the
Dearborn Sessions EP. Typhoon released their sophomore album,
Hunger and Thirst, in 2010. The album was their first to be released by Portland record label
Tender Loving Empire. That year, Typhoon was voted number two on
Willamette Weeks annual list of the top ten best new bands in Portland. Typhoon released the EP
A New Kind of House in 2011 as a thematic companion to
Hunger and Thirst. On August 4, 2011, Typhoon made their television debut on
Late Show with David Letterman, performing "The Honest Truth;" the track was ranked #3 in
Paste magazine's list of the 50 best songs of 2011. Their song "Prosthetic Love was featured in the Veronica Mars Movie. During this period, Typhoon opened for
The Thermals,
Quasi,
Yann Tiersen,
Explosions in the Sky,
The Decemberists,
Belle and Sebastian, and
The Shins, and toured with
Lady Lamb the Beekeeper. Their music later appeared on the
SyFy series
Being Human and the
NBC series
Chuck. Typhoon released
White Lighter in 2013 via Roll Call Records. The album, described as entrancing with uplifting melodies and dark lyrics, was recorded just outside the band's hometown in Portland, Oregon. It reached #105 on US Billboard Top 200 and #2 on Heatseekers.
White Lighter was voted #28 on NPR's Best Album of the Year and #37 on PASTE Album of the Year. Their song "Young Fathers" was included in NPR's Best Songs of 2013 list and "Prosthetic Love" appeared in the movie
Veronica Mars. The band played the Lollapalooza and Outside Lands music festivals in 2014 and finished the summer with a tour with
Portugal. The Man and
Grouplove throughout August and September. Typhoon released
Live at Crystal Ballroom in November 2015 as a free download on
Bandcamp and The album includes live performances of songs from
White Lighter and the band's older album,
Hunger and Thirst. A companion series of videos from the show was posted on YouTube. On July 7, 2016, the band announced that they had begun recording of their next full-length album. During this period, frontman Kyle Morton released his solo debut
What Will Destroy You and toured in January 2017. In September 2017, the band teased 60 seconds of a new song from their upcoming album and announced listening parties for October 2017. On October 25, 2017, the band announced their fourth album
Offerings, scheduled to be released on January 12, 2018. The album debuted on NPR's First Listen on January 4, 2018. In an interview with Sound of Boston, violinist Shannon Steel explained how the band lineup changed since the last album: "As time passed, some members started taking root at home, choosing different careers, starting families, and going naturally in different directions. As a result we’ve had a slight personnel change. It worked out sort of seamlessly though because the songs that Kyle started bringing to the group had a much different energy to them than what we had come up with before." On January 22, 2021, Typhoon released
Sympathetic Magic without prior announcement, a full-length album completed during the
COVID-19 pandemic, along with lead single "Empire Builder." Morton said of the album, "I wrote all these songs while puttering around the house these past several months, because, what else was I going to do? The songs are about people- the space between them and the ordinary, miraculous things that happen there, as we come into contact, imitate each other, leave our marks, lose touch. Being self and other somehow amounting to the same thing." In 2022 the band released two singles "Mind of God" and "New Wife" for the EP
Underground Complex No. 1 which released on April 15, 2022. == Style ==