Biography
Between his work with Black Dice and his extensive solo catalog and side projects, Eric Copeland has created everything from noisy hardcore to playful lo-fi dance music. Starting out as a member of Black Dice during the late '90s when they were a thrash-influenced noise-core band, he remained with them as they progressed into sprawling psychedelia, as on 2002's Beaches and Canyons, and to more rhythmic efforts, like 2005's Broken Ear Record. After collaborating with Animal Collective's Dave Portner as Terrestrial Tones, Copeland went solo (while still remaining active with Black Dice) with the release of 2007's free-form Hermaphrodite. Subsequent albums explored warped visions both of dance music and pop songwriting, with 2020's Dumb It Down folding breezy vocals in among Copeland's signature cartoonish loops and electronic scramble.

Eric Copeland was still in high school when he joined Black Dice, a band founded by his brother and some other students at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1997. Contributing vocals and electronics to the band in its earliest incarnation, Copeland was with Black Dice almost from their very beginning, rolling with them through various drastic stylistic changes as the years went on. While still involved with Black Dice as a main gig, Copeland started the side project Terrestrial Tones in 2004 with then-roommate Dave Portner of Animal Collective. Both members of the duo's respective bands were on temporary hiatus and they had a chance to collaborate and record. In 2007 Copeland released his first solo album, Hermaphrodite, on the Paw Tracks label. The mostly instrumental effort fell somewhere between the electronic experiments of Black Dice and the woozier Terrestrial Tones material, and it marked the beginning of a prolific recording schedule for Copeland.

Various 7" singles, CD-Rs, and one-off releases came regularly between proper albums, often on various independent labels. Alien in a Garbage Dump was released by Paw Tracks in 2009, followed by Strange Days (Post Present Medium) the next year. Issued by Escho in 2011, Waco Taco Combo saw Copeland's work shift into a more rhythmic dimension, employing fractured samples to add relatively straightforward beats to his always wobbly compositions. This trend followed on 2012's Limbo (Underwater Peoples) and crystallized on 2013's Joke in the Hole (DFA) with his least cloudy solo material up to that point. Further singles and EPs followed on DFA, while two mini-albums (2014's Logo My Ego and 2015's Jesus Freak) appeared on Ron Morelli's L.I.E.S. (Long Island Electrical Systems) imprint.

In 2016, DFA released Copeland's mutated pop album Black Bubblegum. Two experimental techno albums followed: Brooklyn Banks (Palmetto Arts) and the double-LP Courtesy, Professionalism, Respect (L.I.E.S.). In 2017, DFA released Black Bubblegum Remixed as well as the full-length Goofballs, another exploration of playful, abstract club music. The spontaneously recorded Trogg Modal, Vol. 1 appeared in October of 2018, with Vol. 2 arriving in early 2019. Copeland switched gears for 2020 album Dumb It Down, embracing pop structures, highlighting guitar, and singing melodically on almost every song while keeping his distinctive fried electronics at the core of the arrangements. ~ Fred Thomas & Paul Simpson, Rovi




 
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U.F.O.s Over Vampire City
Eric Copeland "Rip It" (Official Audio) - DFA RECORDS
Dumb It Down
Eric Copeland - Fresco (Official Music Video)
Eric Copeland: Fun Dink Death
Eric Copeland - Motor
Eric Copeland "Rokzi" (Official Best Fan Made Music Video Ever)
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