
The Living Tombstone: Multiplayer at Studio
Mit Sam Haft, The Living Tombstone, Yoav Landau
Electro duo The Living Tombstone perform hits and narrative-driven songs blending gaming culture and dance music at Studio Club
"TLT" as they are known to their legion of fans, are the duo Yoav Landau and Sam Haft. Having created and released music for the last 15 years, they have amassed 9 million YouTube subscribers, and their music has achieved over 70 billion streams across platforms. The band is coming off a sold-out four-continent-spanning 2025 World Tour. Their unique position as both recording artists and influencers in the gaming and 'geekdom' space gives them a significant cultural footprint and history, with multiple RIAA-awarded songs, and even charting at #4 on the Dance/Electronic chart with their track "Five Nights At Freddy's," which was used in the end credits of the Blumhouse/NBC Universal produced film. TLT's "It's Been so Long" was then used in the end-credits of Five Nights At Freddy's 2. "Our fans connect to us because they're obsessed with lore and story. So now we're giving them a story that belongs entirely to them," says band member Sam Haft, who portrays the primary vocalist character "Rust" onstage. "I don't think of us as The Living Tombstone - I think of us as the two guys who write the story for The Living Tombstone. The act has its own world and its own characters for people to follow. It's our job to continue to provide fans with an interesting narrative." Haft, originally a TV and film writer by trade, joined The Living Tombstone as a songwriter-lyricist-vocalist seven years ago, but ask him and he'll tell you, "The magic is all Yoav. I'm hardworking and lucky - he's special." Founding member Yoav Landau, who portrays the band's frontman character "zero_one" onstage, started TLT as a form of escapism, feeling isolated as a teenager. Yoav found an emotional outlet in developing music about his favorite television shows to connect with like-minded fans and communities across the world. With a rapidly growing viral music act, Yoav dropped out of college, and has been doing The Living Tombstone full time since. "I'm super grateful for the existence of YouTube," explains Yoav. "The internet always felt more like a home to me than anywhere else." And the more Yoav began to create, the more his "home" of the internet embraced him. Before meeting Haft, he had already amassed hundreds of millions of streams, and one of YouTube's earliest million-subscriber plaques. TLT's manager, Octone Records co-founder David Boxenbaum, never thought he would manage an act, but something surprised him when he first encountered TLT. "These guys disprove the rule, that you can't just put your music out there and expect people to find it," he says with a grin. "These guys put it out there, and millions of people found it." And he's right - they have - from major movie studios like Universal Pictures, to A-Listers like Will Smith and Jack Black. TLT has carved out its own little corner of the geek culture zeitgeist. TLT encountered Boxenbaum - or "Box" as friends call him - while developing a TV show for Japanese media giant Avex, where he was the head of their mus

















