- Opiate² - Single · 2022
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- Fear Inoculum · 2019
- 10,000 Days · 2006
- 10,000 Days · 2006
Essential Albums
- The massive, nearly 79-minute Lateralus is TOOL entering full bloom as the 21st century's most popular, beloved and impactful progressive rock band—a patient unfurling of heady ideas, mystical themes and off-kilter riffs. The trademarks of their next two decades are born here on their third album—a spiral of math and science themes, brain-melting time signatures, shifting rhythmic interplay, expanding song lengths, tumbles of drums and the metaphysical artwork of Alex Grey. It's a legacy band embarking on a new flight path, reinventing their experimental genius and finding new ways to be heavy.
- TOOL's second album—perhaps the best heavy metal album of the entire '90s—is the magnum opus of TOOL's first decade, the ambitious, spiritual peak of alternative nation's crew of sensitive, reclusive cynics. This 77-minute piece of metaphysical metal explodes with everything from churning radio singles ("Stinkfist", "Forty Six & 2") to a syncopated 13-minute prog-metal epic ("Third Eye") to a rumbling electro-acoustic headphone head trip ("(-) Ions"). It contains everything that makes TOOL unlikely hard rock heroes: rhythmic trickery, ridiculous chops, art-sludge riffs and a sense of humour. All of the above are available on the album's most evocative song, "Ænema", an apocalyptic, sardonic number about California sinking into the sea based on Bill Hicks' venomous "Goodbye You Lizard Scum" routine.
Albums
- 2006
Artist Playlists
- Think for yourself, question authority and pry open your third eye.
- Nightmarish animation from one of alt-metal’s most captivating bands.
- From Deftones and Mastodon to St. Vincent and Mac DeMarco.
- There’s so much more than prog and metal behind the band’s sound.
- Listen to the hits performed on the blockbuster tour.
Singles & EPs
More To Hear
- The alt metal rocker talks Puscifer's LP 'Existential Reckoning.'
- Maynard James Keenan talks Tool, A Perfect Circle, and Puscifer.
About TOOL
TOOL have always relished flouting rock ’n’ roll conventions—whether that takes the form of concerts where frontman Maynard James Keenan sings while shrouded in darkness or 11-minute-plus songs released as singles. But like the ambitious groups the quartet count as influences (e.g., King Crimson, Pink Floyd), TOOL have amassed a deeply loyal fanbase and a catalogue full of complex, rewarding music and visuals. The band formed in early-’90s Los Angeles, after Keenan—who had been performing with the theatrical visual project Green Jellÿ—and guitarist Adam Jones teamed up with drummer Danny Carey, another Green Jellÿ associate. Carey's CV as a session player notably (and surprisingly) included work with Carole King. A simmering cauldron of grungy, angst-ridden alt-metal, TOOL’s 1993 full-length debut, Undertow, spawned the propulsive hit “Sober”, which came paired with a groundbreaking stop-motion video co-directed by Jones. Over time, the band’s studio albums emerged less frequently—2020’s Fear Inoculum came 13 years after the band’s previous album, 10,000 Days—but became more intricate; the music took cues from prog metal, space rock, stoner metal and post-rock. In TOOL’s absence, a cavalcade of alt-metal bands formed and carried on their ambitious legacy by forging their own boundary-pushing paths.
- FROM
- Los Angeles, CA, United States
- FORMED
- 1990
- GENRE
- Metal