Tally Hall is an American rock band formed in December 2002 and based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The band has a relatively significant cult following, and is known for upbeat melodies and whimsical lyrics; the band members once described their musical style as "wonky rock" and "fabloo rock".
Tally Hall has five members, distinguished by the color of their neckties: vocalist and guitarist Rob Cantor (yellow), vocalist and bassist Zubin Sedghi (blue), vocalist and guitarist Joe Hawley (red), drummer Ross Federman (gray), and vocalist and keyboardist Andrew Horowitz (green).
Once under the Atlantic Records recording label, Tally Hall was, again, signed to indie label Quack!Media, who previously helped finance and nationally distribute their debut studio album, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum. They released their second album, Good & Evil, on June 21, 2011. Pre-orders were given a digital download from Quack to compensate for the time it took for the physical copy to be delivered.
Talmon Henry "Tally" Hall (born May 12, 1985) is an American professional soccer player who plays for Orlando City in Major League Soccer as a goalkeeper.
Born in SeaTac, Washington, Hall attended Gig Harbor High School, and was a star for the San Diego State University Aztecs, where he was a two-time NSCAA and College Soccer News All-American, a semi-finalist for the M.A.C. Hermann Trophy, and a first-team all-Pacific-10 Conference honoree for two straight years. During his college years, Hall also played with Boulder Rapids Reserve in the USL Premier Development League.
Although Hall was drafted by Los Angeles Galaxy in the 2007 MLS SuperDraft, Hall signed with Danish club Esbjerg instead. Hall spent two years in Denmark making only senior competitive start in the Danish Cup tournament.
Hall returned to the United States in early 2009, and signed with Houston Dynamo. He made his first start for Dynamo on July 1, 2009, in a Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup third round game against USL First Division side Austin Aztex, which Houston won 2-0. Hall also played in Houston's 4-0 quarterfinal win over the Charleston Battery.