
For fans of the Maynard James Keenon band Tool, the title of this new release feels like the time that has passed waiting on this new disk. Tool's last disk,
Lateralus, was released five years ago in 2001 and a lot has happened since then, but as evidenced by my trip to Best Buy where I was nearly trampled by a couple guys trying to get copies, they still draw a crowd. Honestly, though, after five years of waiting I was hoping for a little more.
This disk seems to take a page from Keenon's
A Perfect Circle songbook, in that it is a less bone-crushing orchestrally complex piece, and has more of an ethereal, wandering, industro-metal-meets-jam-band feel. Tool fans will enjoy it, primarily because it is the first new Tool they have had in like forever, but mainstream America and certainly mainstream radio probably will be less enthusiastic. The title track itself clocks in at an astounding Pink Floyd-like 11+ minutes. Many other tracks come in at 7+ minutes and more. "Right In Two" is another long tracker, more like a Tool standard, with a long, slow build, ending in a götterdämerung-like crescendo.
Packaged in a strange 3-D stereographic package that must have caused fits for everyone involved, the disk actually includes thick hard plastic glasses to allow you to view the images in the liner notes.
Maynard also continues to offer his fans weird audio clips to try to decipher. On
Ænima it was a strange Hitler-esque monologue that turned out to be a recipe for deviled eggs,"Die Eier Von Satan," proving once again that German is just not a romance language. This time it appears to be an Apache spiritual cantation, called "Lipan Conjuring." It will not so easy to deciper this one. Also on the indecipherable list is the track "Viginti Tres" which appears to consists of some kind of electronic goofing around in the studio and doesn't really add much to the disk other than another listing on the liner notes. Maybe if I wore the 3-D glasses while I listened too it...
Favorite tracks:
Vicarious
The Pot
Right In Two