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Tool Pushing Ahead With Live DVD From ‘Lateralus’ Tour

Enigmatic alternative metal icons Tool are pushing ahead with a live Blu-ray/DVD offering. The band’s drummer Danny Carey was recently interviewed by Cleveland Scene and spoke of their plans, stating that it will be “a good mind blower for all the hardcore fans” and that “most of it will be from the ‘ Lateralus ‘ tour from 2002.”

Meanwhile, the band recently issued an updated version of the title track to their debut EP “ Opiate ” in honor of its 30th anniversary (stream it here .) Despite the surprise new offering, the group’s progress towards any future new music remains up in the for now, though they do have some irons in the fire. Speaking to the aforementioned publication of that, Carey offered:

“I’m sure it won’t take us this long for the next one. We even had some stuff left over from the last one [‘ Fear Inoculum ‘] that we’ll develop. We have head starts on three or four new songs.”

Tool ‘s immediate touring plans include the below runs:

With The Acid Helps :

03/15 Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center 03/17 Moline, IL – TaxSlayer Center 03/18 St. Louis, MO – Enterprise Center 03/20 Cleveland, OH – Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse

With Brass Against :

04/23 Copenhagen, DEN – Royal Arena 04/25 Oslo, NOR – Spektrum 04/26 Stockholm, SWE – Avicii Arena 04/28 Hamburg, GER – Barclaycard Arena 04/29 Frankfurt, GER – Festhalle 05/02 Manchester, UK – AO Arena Manchester 05/04 Birmingham, UK – Resorts World Arena 05/06 Dublin, IRE – 3Arena 05/09 London, UK – The O2 Arena 05/10 London, UK – The O2 Arena 05/12 Paris, FRA – AccorHotels Arena 05/13 Antwerp, BEL – Sportpaleis 05/15 Berlin, GER – Mercedes-Benz Arena 05/17 Cologne, GER – Lanxess Arena 05/19 Amsterdam, NET – Ziggo Dome 05/21 Krakow, POL – Tauron Arena 05/23 Prague, CZE – O2 Arena 05/24 Budapest, HUN – SportAréna

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Maya Neelakantan

The story behind Tool’s Lateralus: "A real moment of experiment and risk”

Tool bassist Justin Chancellor looks back on the making of the band's 2001 release Lateralus: the album that proved progressive music could resonate with the public.

Tool

The 1990s were not kind to progressive rock. Grunge had made virtuosity unfashionable, boy bands were all the rage, and hip hop was inexorably pushing rock out of the limelight. Legacy bands like Pink Floyd and Rush could still crack the charts, but they were lonely torchbearers for a genre that seemed to exist in its own hermetic world, incapable or perhaps disinterested in penetrating the mainstream. 

It was against this unpromising backdrop that Tool crafted their most ambitious and unashamedly progressive album to date. Released on May 15, 2001, Lateralus hit No.1 on the Billboard 200 album chart and went on to outsell the likes of Jay-Z, Eminem and Madonna for the year. And it did all this despite being darker, stranger and weirder than the band’s previous albums, taking them from the alternative metal of Undertow and Ænima into the realm of progressive rock. 

“It was a learning curve, that whole experience,” says Justin Chancellor. The British bassist had joined Tool – guitarist Adam Jones, drummer Danny Carey and frontman Maynard James Keenan – when they’d already started work on 1996’s Ænima , following the departure of Paul D’Amour. It was a major step-up in scale from his previous band, Peach, back in London. “As far as success and all that stuff, being in this band, it wasn’t like joining Whitesnake or Poison or something where it’s like groupies and crazy drug binges,” says Chancellor. “These are real, hardworking musicians. Our backstage is really quite pleasant and calm, almost school-like. That’s good because it keeps you really focused on what you’re doing.” 

And Tool is a very democratic band, where every member has an equal voice. “They are surrounded by some really excellent creative people who are all really encouraging. It was very tough to be keeping my head together for the first few years, but they totally made it fine, saying, ‘You’re one of us.’” But that status brings its own responsibilities. “Being an equal member of a band like Tool requires that you put in an equal share so that you don’t drag the boat down, that’s a pressure in itself. That’s a built-in way of us all keeping an eye on each other – no one can really lag.” 

Coming aboard during the writing for Ænima was a baptism by fire. “It was a very new experience for the entire band,” says Chancellor. “We went on a really big tour, then we did a secondary tour for the best part of two years. By the end of it, I think everybody needed a little breathing room from each other. We took a pretty decent break. Maynard had some aspirations to pursue some other areas of music with his other mates, so at first, for me being new in the band, I was perplexed – aren’t we going to make a new album? Aren’t we going to carry on now on the back of this success? But obviously they’d been together a little longer and they’d already been through some ups and downs with having a new member in the band. After that tour for Ænima , everyone was quite happy to slow down a bit.” Well, almost everyone. “Maynard calls himself a worldwide multitasker and I think that’s in his nature. He was never going to slow down.” 

Keenan was already working on music for what became A Perfect Circle with guitarist Billy Howerdel, who was living in the singer’s house in North Hollywood. Their debut album, Mer De Noms , came out in May 2000, but they were already on tour opening for Nine Inch Nails from April. That ran into the summer, before A Perfect Circle began a run of their own headline shows in July through to September. Then in 2001 they went out again, from the end of January through March, so, while Keenan was occupied with all that, Chancellor, Jones and Carey set about creating new music for Tool. 

“We started to put some stuff together thinking maybe it would pull together quite quickly, we could get some solid forms of songs together, but it was really hard,” says Chancellor. “[With] Ænima , four songs were written when I joined, so you’ve got a chunk of something there already and we just built on that and added to it with my contribution being amalgamated into that. Starting this new project was literally like: ‘All right, we’ve got to write a whole album now with me, a whole new setup,’ so it was tough. We struggled to get anything solidified and by the time we had a few basic ideas, Maynard was ready to go with his other band, so we all said, ‘All right, that’s the way it’s going to be.’ It turned out that it gave us that breathing room. He went off, we all got to knuckle down and really be quite self-indulgent in a way, but we needed to look at what we were going to do, the three of us... musically, we needed to explore a bit.” 

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Tool’s Lateralus album cover

The trio of instrumentalists established a routine, meeting every Monday to Thursday in their rehearsal space to work on ideas. They recorded every session, burning the best of the results onto CDs that they took home after practice to review. “We still basically do that,” says Chancellor. “Go home in the car, listen to the practice on the way home, mull it over overnight, come back in with great new ideas that are completely different from everyone else’s ideas. Everybody has a new idea the next day.” 

As Lateralus marked the first time that Chancellor had been involved with the writing process right from the outset, he had loads of ideas to contribute to the sessions. “But our ideas are very basic building blocks when we write together,” he says. “It’s going, ‘Here guys, this is what the idea is’ and seeing how they react to it, and vice versa. They had ideas [as well]. I don’t know if you’d call that organic, but it’s a real experimental chemistry, putting things together and seeing how they react. Since he [Keenan] was away, we got real experimental. The last track we did on Ænima was Third Eye , which really went further into the experimental realm, so that’s how we started.” 

And with A Perfect Circle doing well, they were under no pressure to hurry the process along. “We had time,” says Chancellor. “We would send stuff to Maynard, he might send something back and we’d change it and send it back. He’d be like, ‘You know what, I’m out on tour, you guys finish what you are doing. Just make your mind up and when  you’re done, we’ll figure it out.” 

Tool had explored the use of odd measures and polyrhythms on Undertow and Ænima , but with Lateralus they pushed these ideas further than ever before. The title track alone moves in a pattern between 9/8, 8/8, and 7/8, referencing the Fibonacci Sequence. Chancellor says that their fondness for unconventional time signatures isn’t born out of any desire to try to be clever, or even out of any conscious decisions. “It’s really just the way things come out,” he says. “From my point of view, I have a lot of rhythms come into my head. I’m walking my dogs or something and
I get these chugging rhythms in my head. I count them out and they tend to be not in rounds of four. There’s something I like about the awkwardness or intensity of something not quite resolving or over-resolving. I love five because it keeps snapping back, it’s got this weird urgency and uncomfortability, like, where is it going?” 


When the bassist brings one of these strange rhythmic ideas to Jones and Carey, they begin pulling it apart and putting it back together in different ways. “Adam and Danny normally react by saying, ‘That’s really weird,’ to one of my ideas, and then Adam will be like, ‘Why don’t we simplify it and put it down? We’ve got this complicated thing Justin has written, why don’t we simplify it and actually see what it sounds like in 4/4?’” 

The goal then becomes to take an unusual groove and see what it would sound like if they made it into something that might get played on the radio. “We’ve already got this, so start subtracting from it,” says Chancellor. The technique became a recurring part of the writing process for Lateralus – stripping ideas back, working them into a song, and then building back towards the original, complex rhythmic concept or riff. It’s all about the end goal of being free from having to do the conventional. “The guys have had some education in music. Danny a lot, Adam quite a bit, I had a tiny bit, but we didn’t go to music colleges or anything like that,” says Chancellor. “There is a certain amount of making it up as we go, and there is a freedom to that. There’s a liberation to not knowing what you’re supposed to do and really to be in a rock band where there are even less rules and to have people encouraging you to do unusual stuff is really liberating.” 

That liberation brought its own challenges to the writing process as the instrumentalists had to figure out how to keep track of everything they created, with all the odd time signatures and challenging ideas. The solution they came up with is surprisingly low tech. “We have a whiteboard and markers,” says Chancellor. “We quickly realised we needed to do that because it’s not just that we didn’t really know what we’re doing, each of us has a different way of remembering it. I have a different way of counting it, Danny does, Adam does, so we would have to come up with names for riffs. We actually give them names, write all the names down on the side and then a number next to them, the number of beats in a bar basically, so that would be more just to remember which chunks went in order. Then we could at least remember the sequence of stuff and remember what riff was what, and the variations of that riff. We would make notes about all that stuff and really it would be more like coming up with our own language between the three of us, which if you don’t do, it gets really frustrating. ‘What are talking about? That’s not what it is!’ So that’s how we formed not to say a language, but a technique for being able to remember and refer to different sections and parts.” 

With Keenan occupied with A Perfect Circle and no pressure to hurry along the writing, the three musicians had both the time and the desire to reach further and further out of their comfort zones. “For myself, as a writer of music, I always wanted to create something I’d never heard before. That’s really the ultimate goal,” says Chancellor. “I’ve never wanted to sound like someone else necessarily, I wanted to find this thing that’s exciting because I’ve never heard it before, and I find that in music that I like. I go, ‘Whoa, what is that?’” 

Chancellor was aware of the popularity that Tool had already experienced before he joined, which made him nervous about pushing the envelope too far with Lateralus in case they alienated the fanbase. “They’d already done very well and I’m like, ‘You’re sure? You’re sure everyone is going to like this? It doesn’t really sound like Tool,’” he says. “I was a huge fan of Tool and obviously that was another challenge for me, having more respect for their old stuff than something I was writing myself, so they were able to change that for me and just say, ‘This is really good, we think it’s great and wait until you hear what we do to it.’” 

There’s always a risk in doing something different. “You have people that support you; you risk losing them, but you run the possibility of gaining other people,” says Chancellor. “You just don’t know. I think there should be more encouragement in that area for younger musicians. Don’t be shy to offer your ideas, that’s what makes the world go round, we want different stuff. Maybe it takes Lateralus or something in there pulling it apart to keep that experimental area free and open. I guess it’s there but it’s just people having access to it. Do people want to hear it? Maybe they don’t. Maybe experimental means not popular.” 

The band pushed the limits of the CD format with Lateralus . Single discs could contain a maximum of 79 minutes of music, and the group delivered an album of 78 minutes 51 seconds. While Keenan’s engagements with A Perfect Circle had created space for the musicians to experiment, he didn’t want to write lyrics until the music was knocked into some sort of shape. “We did a few songs, we got a few finished, and then he [Keenan] went off again, did a bit more touring,” says Chancellor. “It became even more clear to us. Okay now we can really take our time with these other pieces and basically lay them out, get them right how we want them knowing we don’t have to go back and forward with him. We’re just going to wait until it’s done.” 

This wasn’t a case of the instrumentalists imposing their will on the singer just because he was away with his other band. It was an approach that worked for everyone as it meant that Keenan didn’t have to keep rewriting lyrics every time Jones, Carey and Chancellor had a new musical idea to try out. “Basically, that was the beginning of him saying to us, ‘Why don’t you guys just decide what you want to do and we’ll stick with it,’” says Chancellor. “The music was heavily set but obviously sometimes you have to adapt it. If he’s got a strong idea lyrically and there’s this road bump in the way, we’ve got to remove it. Sometimes it will be, ‘That’s my favourite bit,’ or whatever, but that’s just a normal back and forth argument. He’s reacting to the music, now he’s got this great idea lyrically that he’s following to its end and if you just tweak something, it’s purifying the whole song. I would say that we didn’t do that too much, we were quite stubborn about the music, but also he was quite stubborn about the fact that he goes, ‘Just finish it, be happy with it, and I will deal with it.’” 

There was plenty to deal with. Not many singers in the rock world are comfortable navigating melodies over ever-changing rhythms and meters. “The beautiful thing about these weird time signatures, a lot of times he will, almost with a needle and thread, just tie it all together,” says Chancellor. “I love the way what he’s saying is very in-your-face, straightforward, matter of fact almost, but it just weaves in and out of the rhythm. It’s like he writes out a sentence and then just lays it in there in the perfect spots. It’s almost like he’s rhyming to the music.” 

Lateralus reunited the band with producer David Bottrill, with whom they’d recorded Ænima . “Being in the studio, that was a huge learning process for us just as far as the equipment, the mixing, what we could capture sonically, that was a whole other thing,” says Chancellor. The recording took place from October 2000 through to January 2001, using multiple studios mainly in North Hollywood, including Cello Studios and The Hook, where they’d worked on Ænima . Switching studios was more a matter of practicalities rather than the result of any grand artistic vision; sometimes they ran out of time at a studio that had another client booked in, so they had to relocate. 

“We always start in a big room for the drums, like a big orchestra room, but they’re really very expensive,” says Chancellor. “There’s no point having this big room and a month later you’re in there with one little guitar amp recording guitar. We basically do  the drums in a big room. That time we mixed in a totally separate place that’s set up just for mixing. We had two smaller studios, way less glamorous than the drum place, where you spend most of the time, months, up in the valley  somewhere, 105 degrees [40°C] in a concrete parking lot but it’s got all the gear and we can spend a lot of time there doing the musical overdubs other than the drums.” 

Prior to Tool, Bottrill had worked with Peter Gabriel , with David Sylvian and Robert Fripp on the albums The First Day and Darshan (The Road To Graceland) , and again with Fripp on King Crimson ’s THRAK. So, while he wasn’t known for anything as heavy as Tool, he was no stranger to progressive rock. His role with the band was primarily to help them realise their sound in the studio, although Chancellor recalls that Bottrill helped them arrange a few of the segues between songs on Lateralus and played piano when needed. Says Chancellor: “I think we were learning what our sound was a bit more. When we did Ænima , he was less of a rock guy, he’d been working with Peter Gabriel and King Crimson. We were looking for some of the raw guitar stuff as well; we wanted some of those sections to be real rocking.” 

The bassist believes that with Lateralus , the band and Bottrill achieved a great cohesion between “the ambient, experimental, trippy sounds that people know us for” and what he calls “the hard meat of the song.” It was certainly a major leap forwards in that regard from Ænima , establishing a sinuous flow through the album. “I don’t know what he’d done in-between those [two albums],” says Chancellor, “but they’re definitely very different-sounding records. There is space in there on Lateralus , there is a lot of breath in there, but when it gets heavy it’s real crunchy too. We wanted to take our relationship with him further on that album and we need someone we’re familiar with. Bringing someone in to the four of us is quite a big ask creatively, so we’d already worked with him, it made sense to do this next album with him as well.” 

Unlike albums released during what became known as the Loudness Wars, where music became incredibly compressed in the pursuit of volume as an end unto itself, Lateralus is a dynamic listening experience. The quiet moments really allow the volume to drop back, making the heavy sections more intense by comparison. Chancellor explains that was, in no small part, the result of each bandmember’s determination to be heard. “A lot of it comes from people really standing up for themselves,” he says. “Some of the crushing stuff, the high end on the guitar would be almost painful for a moment in a solo. I might be looking at Adam, going, ‘It might be a little bit...?’ He’s like, ‘No, this is the moment where it needs to do that.’” 

But hearing the dynamics in a custom-built mixing studio is very different from how listeners encounter the music in normal circumstances. “You know that all this stuff is going to get compressed, put on the radio it’s going to get compressed even more, all squashed down,” says Chancellor, “and there’s a real risk with being very dynamic because sometimes you won’t be able to hear something, it’s so quiet. A lot of people when they mix, they get this middle road of everything literally for the format of putting music into a little box. You have to do that so there are limits to what people think is reasonable and unreasonable.” 

Chancellor is understandably protective of the tone of his bass in the mix, wanting to ensure his instrument doesn’t get muscled aside or swamped by the guitars and drums. “I’m like,
I want to be able to hear it,” he says, “so there’s this big fight between all of us.” Danny Carey, for example, may have a particular drum fill “that’s incredibly important to him that you can hear it.” But then everyone in the band hears the songs slightly differently, filtered through their own perspective. “He’s hearing this particular fill as elevating that moment in the music so there’s a lot of us fighting our own corner. It can be difficult, it can be quite upsetting, and we have some decent fights but, in the end, I think that really creates the dynamic. The dynamic is that: ‘This is important to me.’ We even do it to each other, ‘No, Adam, you need to come up.’ There might be a part that I think needs to come up in his guitar and I have to explain that I’m hearing the song this way, this is why it needs to be there. Perhaps it’s the fact that we’re all on an equal footing in this band that it requires standing up for yourself and by the very fact of that, you hear that dynamic in the music.” 

With the mixing and mastering complete, Lateralus was presented to the world in May 2001. “It’s always just a great relief to actually let it go, that moment when suddenly it’s on the radio and you can’t stop it,” says Chancellor. “There’s something very satisfying and relieving about that because you can’t change it anymore and that’s the greatest thing about it.” 

The tour started on the day the album came out, May 15, with a show in Atlanta, Georgia. The band played four US dates supporting King Crimson before heading to Europe, where they divided their time between headline shows and festivals, including performances at Ozzfest in the UK, Rock Am Ring in Germany, and Pinkpop in the Netherlands. Over the course of 2001 and 2002, they played more than 200 shows in support of the album’s release, eventually wrapping up at Long Beach Arena, California, on November 24, 2002.


Lateralus was both a critical and commercial hit, but Chancellor says he didn’t pay too much attention to the press, preferring to gauge the album’s success on how well the music was received live. “That’s when the songs really start to live and breathe, you really get to know them,” he says. “I know we take a long time writing our albums and we play the songs a lot before we record them – and they’re set in stone before we record them, there’s not a lot of experimental stuff in the studio – but they don’t really get to find their own personality until you play them a lot live. Just starting to play the song Lateralus in the set, starting to feel the magnitude of it, the way it really did work, and then the excitement of being able to make it even better, to get a greater performance, or to strive for a greater performance than you put on the album. Obviously, it’s received well, it’s going really well, people like it, because I’m here playing it and I’m able to literally enjoy it now, where it was a real struggle to get it to that point.” 

For the lead single, the band chose Schism , a track that’s positively awash with odd time signatures. It was a bold choice to submit for radio play, but it reached No.2 on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay and Mainstream Rock charts. “I found it very hard when we came to pick a single,” says Chancellor, who confesses to feeling concerned about how it would be received by the fanbase. “Adam and Danny immediately were like, ‘ Schism is the hit, that’s the one, everybody is going to love it.’ I was honestly really on the opposite end of that. ‘Really? It’s so odd.’ I guess it’s just a little bit of self-doubt. They’ve got a real bravery about them, those guys. They weren’t trying to be provocative or annoying by picking that, they genuinely heard it and I don’t know how they heard that because I didn’t hear it. Now with 20 years’ perspective, I can hear it, which is really interesting. I can actually go, ‘Wow, it is catchy, there is a simple beauty to it’, but I think it was heard for me to see that at the time.” 

As if the song itself isn’t strange enough, Schism was accompanied by a music video directed by Adam Jones that was completely at odds with what most rock bands were putting out.
In fact, Tool themselves don’t appear in the video at all. Instead, it features an alien-looking creature. The decision to make such an unconventional promo video came from the band’s insistence on having complete creative control over every aspect of their output. Chancellor credits this level of autonomy to the band seeing what happened to other acts that signed away their ability to steer their own destinies. “Nobody gets to tell us what to do at all,” says Chancellor, noting that this meant they never felt under pressure to make a typical rock video with the band jumping around onstage. “It’s great, Adam came from a film-making background, he worked for Stan Winston in special effects,” he says. 

As a member of the Stan Winston Studio, Jones had credits on Terminator 2: Judgement Day and Batman Returns , so he knew what he was doing. “One of your bandmembers knows how to make movies, especially with the way we were experimental in our music, yeah, it was just cool, living the dream really,” says Chancellor, who joined in with the work on Schism . “He’s telling me how to pour moulds, we’re all in the garage at the house like kids, it was incredible. And I think the surreal quality of the movies is an extension of the art: it’s there to make you open your mind even more, to put you in a free space where you can think about anything. You can just relax, instead of constricting the idea even further by going, ‘This is a band looking cool onstage.’ It’s actually giving breath to the art by being surreal and unexplainable.” None of which stopped the track winning the Grammy for Best Metal Performance in 2002. 

While the charts continue to be dominated by hip hop and dance, Lateralus proved that progressive music could resonate with the public. In its wake, The Mars Volta , Porcupine Tree , Opeth and Mastodon broke into the album charts, and the heavy end of the progressive scene became more vital than ever. Although Tool have only released two more albums in the 20 years since, both 10,000 Days and Fear Inoculum walk in the footsteps of Lateralus . “I think it opened the doors even wider – you really can do what you want to an even greater extent,” says Chancellor, before qualifying his statement. “And then there’s some element where you realise we can’t do just what we want, we’re limited by our own abilities. You start to hear some stuff you’ve heard before in Tool songs, ‘Oh, I recognise that.’ That’s just the nature of who you are and who we are together. The great thing about Maynard going away and doing other bands is he comes back with a whole different approach or he’s been able to express himself in different ways in other bands, so when he comes back, he’s more confident or more excited about pursuing different styles. I think you can hear that over the next few albums where he’s not yelling all the time. This great scream he had in the beginning, he almost was like, ‘I want to move on from that.’” 

Tool continue to evolve, and Lateralus remains a defining moment in their musical life. “I think we have found our soul, to a certain extent,” says Chancellor. “When I listened to Lateralus the other day, wow, that was a real moment of experiment and risk and really reaching out into the darkness without fear. It really sounds like that to me. Once we got through that, even our most recent album, it’s still experimental, but it’s a little more comfortable, it’s a little more comfortable in its shoes.” 

Now Chancellor and his bandmates are waiting to get back on the road in support of Fear Inoculum . “We’ve just scratched the surface with our new album,” he says. “Thank God we got it out. Talk about a long time writing an album; that was a long one and to be able to get it out just before all this went down was an incredible relief.” 

They played a handful of European festivals before the pandemic but now they’re back in the rehearsal space, working on fresh material. “We’re always writing new music. I’m going to jam with Danny right now, got some new ideas, we’re getting our chops back after our vaccinations,” says Chancellor. And when they get the green light, they’ll pick up the tour. “We planned stuff several times and rebooked it, but you can imagine planning buses and hotels and tours and venues all over Europe and America, and having to keep cancelling it,” he says. “So, we’re going to wait a little bit before we do that, but once we do it, we’re going to be back full-on, so probably nothing much this year but next year should be chock-a-block. We have a new stage, a new setup that we started using, so the main plan is to follow through with what we were doing before and then see what happens from there. Everyone is getting a bit older so it’s like, we’ve already put the work into this, now we’re going to take it on the road.” 

Originally printed in Prog Magazine #121

After starting his writing career covering the unforgiving world of MMA, David moved into music journalism at Rhythm magazine, interviewing legends of the drum kit including Ginger Baker and Neil Peart. A regular contributor to Prog, he’s written for Metal Hammer, The Blues, Country Music Magazine and more. The author of Chasing Dragons: An Introduction To The Martial Arts Film, David shares his thoughts on kung fu movies in essays and videos for 88 Films, Arrow Films, and Eureka Entertainment. He firmly believes Steely Dan’s Reelin’ In The Years is the tuniest tune ever tuned.

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The untold story of Tool’s Lateralus at 20

  • May 13, 2021 May 13, 2021

2021 is the year that Tool’s Lateralus hits 20 years old! While there’s no indication the band will celebrate (yet) Kerrang have celebrated with a new, and insightful interview with bassist Justin Chancellor .

He reveals quite a bit about the writing of the album, and the tensions surrounding it. Even going as far as saying Tool spent the first day in the studio “having it out with each other”:

“We spent the first day in the lounge having it out with each other, kicking and screaming, laughing and crying,” grins Justin. ​“That whole day, we didn’t go into the tracking room at all.” https://www.kerrang.com/features/the-beauty-of-not-understanding-it-is-letting-it-stay-alive-tools-lateralus-at-20/

There haven’t been many interviews with Tool lately, but this one is excellent and really worth the time! Get cracking!

Oh wow, this was great to read. THIS is the kinda stuff that I know to them is looking backwards, but done tastefully like this is exactly what they should be doing in their twilight years — fleshing out just ANYTHING about the discography, the creative process, codifying their body of work in a real way. These guys are all in their 50s, Danny is 59. I’m not saying open up the books and reveal all of what happened and all the secrets, but it’d be great to have some sort of real retrospective look at their catalog along the …  Read more »

Thank you, Hellboy

10 Things You Didn't Know About Tool's 'Lateralus'

tool lateralus crop

"Once you release an album, you're a product," Tool frontman Maynard James Keenan told Hit Parader in July 2001, two months after the release of the band's third prog-metal opus, Lateralus . "That's a fact of life. You can deny it to yourself, but deep down you know it's true. I heard fans say we sold out when the last albums became successful. I had to agree with them. We are a product. But we're also true to what we believe."

By the early 2000s, Tool were as much a brand as a band, cultivating an aura of mystery, darkness and sophistication — through their purposeful lack of promotion, their brooding videos, their elaborate time-signatures, their elliptical lyrical references — that transcended their actual music. If you liked Tool, you were as likely to love metaphysics as Meshuggah. But Lateralus proved that, for all their grandiosity as a product, their music had continued to evolve. No one sounded like Tool because no one could .

The album arrived at a crucial moment — five years after the game-changing Ænima and one year after Keenan's debut LP with A Perfect Circle. But the wait — which Tool fans have learned to accept as a way of life — was worth it. Below, we highlight some of the album's most intriguing details and stories.

1. Lateralus is 78 minutes and 51 seconds long, making it — by default, considering that most discs max out at 80 minutes — one of the longest single CDs ever recorded. Somehow, though, Tool still left music on the cutting room floor. Producer David Bottrill told the Salival site in 2013, "On Lateralus , I helped more with the structure of some of the songs. I remember campaigning to lose a section of the song 'Lateralus' that Danny liked a lot. I think he still is a little sorry it didn't make it into the song."

2. The terrifying instrumental piece " Faaip de Oiad" is , in trademark Tool style, filled with Easter Eggs and obscure allusions for fans who are willing to dig The song itself blends white noise with distorted drums and a man's feverish rants about "extradimensional beings" — the latter sampled from a 1997 call into Art Bell's Coast to Coast AM radio show.

During the infamous recording, the caller claims to be a former employee of Area 51 and panics audibly that his message is being "[ triangulated ]." According to legend, the satellite carrying the feed died during the broadcast, and someone claiming to be the caller later admitted that he fabricated the tale.

"Who knows if he was speaking from a rational state, is really panicked or is a complete schizophrenic who completely lost it?" drummer Danny Carey told Modern Drummer in June 2001. "We may never know."

Instead of just titling the track "Area 51" or something obvious, Tool added another mystical layer. "Faaip de Oiad" translates to "The Voice of God" in Enochian, an angelic language documented by Renaissance-era British occult philosopher John Dee and his self-described "spirit medium" colleague Edward Kelley.

3. Tool, always way funnier than anyone gives them credit for, have never been shy to fuck around with their fans. During the preceding hype for Lateralus , they teased a fake album title and track list. The beauty of the gag is that major news outlets picked up the goofy names and ran with them. Just take this ABC News blurb: "Tool, in the final stages of tinkering with its new album, has unveiled a title for the long-awaited LP: Systema Enc é phale .

According to the band's Web site ( toolband.com ), the follow-up to 1996's Æ nima will include 'Malfeasance,' 'U.V.R.,' 'Numbereft,' 'Encephatalis,' 'Mummery,' 'Coeliacus,' 'Pain Canal,' 'Lactation,' 'Smyrma,' and 'Riverchrist.'"

Fucking "Pain Canal"? "Riverchrist"? If you fell for that one, you had it coming.

4. Tool fans and other pranksters helped the spread of Lateralus disinformation before the album release Back in the Wild West days of Napster leaks, numerous fake tracks circulated online — to the point where fan sites were forced to play referee. One imposter track was reportedly called "Prove It," which turned out to be Chevelle's "Prove to You."

5. A badass factoid that many Tool fans regard with Biblical importance, some of the lyrics from "Lateralus," if charted syllabically, follow the numeric pattern of Italian mathematician Leonardo of Pisa's famed Fibonacci Sequence Let's untangle this a bit: In the sequence — which correlates with the "Golden Ratio," a pattern that appears throughout nature — each number equals the sum of the previous two. The 16th number in the sequence is 987 (1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987).

During the writing process, bassist Justin Chancellor brought in a riff that, after some workshopping, evolved into measures of 9, 8 and 7. "Danny saw it had a connection to the Fibonacci, so he started trying to work in elements of it," guitarist Adam Jones told Kerrang! in 2015 of the song, which they originally titled "987."

"Then Maynard came in and we started telling him about the sequence. It came from trying to relate to those things in life or nature we all have in common ... It's something that people have been studying since the beginning of time. So we wanted to apply that to our music — that's why we got more into the idea behind science, metaphysics and the myth of communication."

Keenan then built some of his lyrics around the sequence, using words with syllables climbing from numbers one through six and back down — in a haiku-like structure: "Black" (1) "then" (1) "white are" (2) "all I see" (3) "in my infancy" (5) "red and yellow then came to be" (8) "reaching out to me" (5) "let me see" (3).

It's a nifty feat of verbal symmetry, but Keenan regrets the approach. "I feel like I kinda pulled a very pedestrian, sophomoric move by including those numbers in there because, in general, music is the Phi [ or Golden ] ratio," he told Joe Rogan in 2017.

"All nature, all these things we're talking about, it's already here. By pointing it out, staring at it and pointing at it with those numbers present, and the way the numbers and lyrics are — I feel it's good to let people know about it, but I almost feel like it was kind of a dick joke in a way. I could do better."

6. Tool layered lots of weird shit into the mix — including the electrical crackling from a "Jacob's Ladder" transformer — as they indulged in the studio. Much of the experimentation was Carey's territory. "I also had a piano that was destroyed. I got some good samples from that, banging on the strings for 'Resolution,'" he told Modern Drummer . "I liked some didgeridoo samples, and a lot of found-sound stuff. The Tibetan monk sounds you hear on the record are just me growling through a tube.

"That was the initial sample, and then I overdubbed an Oberheim through a Vocoder. Before this record, we were really rigid about being able to perform every note live, but we got away from that for this one. Maynard is doing more harmonies and doubling on his voices, and Adam did more guitar overdubs."

According to the Toolshed fan site, Keenan once noted that the ambient interlude "Mantra" is the slowed-down sound of him squeezing his Siamese cat. Given Tool's love of saying weird shit in interviews, it's best to take that one with a grain of salt. (Perhaps on a future reissue, we'll hear an extended cut of Keenan's cat-squeezing.)

7. The album title is something of a dual reference, nodding to both the thigh muscle vastus lateralis and the concept of "lateral thinking" "[ Lateralis ] itself is actually a muscle, and although the title does have something to do with the muscle, it's more about lateral thinking and how the only way to really evolve as an artist — or as a human, I think — is to start trying to think outside of the lines and push your boundaries," Keenan told Aggro Active in May 2001.

"Kind of take yourself where you haven't been and put yourself in different shoes; all of those clichés."

8. Oh, the good ol' days when a five-year interim between Tool albums felt like a summer vacation ... The frustrating delay between Ænima and Lateralus was partly due to forces outside of the band's control In 1997, Tool's former label Volcano Records filed suit against the band , citing a "wrongful attempt" on the quartet's part "to abandon its exclusive recording contract." The group then filed its own complaint, claiming their contract was never renewed and they were free to pursue other options.

(Tool became involved in another lengthy legal battle in 2007, this time involving artwork and an insurance company, and that insane headache only slowed down their progress on the most highly anticipated heavy music LP of all time .)

"People always ask us why it took so long to record," Jones told Guitar World in June 2001. "But we didn't take four years to record. First, we toured for a couple years behind Ænima . Then we did Ozzfest, and then Maynard did his work with his side group, A Perfect Circle. So we really did this album in about a year, which in my mind is pretty good.

"But you know what?" he continued, "That's not entirely accurate. There were a lot of little things that got in the way of us completing the record on time. I think [ everything ] that could have gone wrong with this album did, from little things like broken gear to bigger issues like getting involved in a lawsuit with our label.

"I was telling the band as we got on a plane to go to the mastering studio in Maine that I wouldn't be surprised if we crashed."

"It was kind of hard to keep being creative," Chancellor told MTV2 that same year. "It kind of grated a bit. And we had to get through that a little bit before we could get back to the creative process."

9. It's easy to forget that Lateralus came out just four months before the horrors of 9/11. Tool performed live just two days after the terrorist attack in Grand Rapids, Michigan — and Keenan admitted they were "finding it very difficult to concentrate." "I have a suggestion for you: Take the feelings you've experienced in the last few days and hang on to them, good or bad, and please create something positive with them," he told the crowd, according to The Grand Rapids Press ' live review.

"Hopefully, tonight has been somewhat of a soundtrack for healing," he added. "Because there's certainly going to be a lot more pain in the coming years."

That same month, the band made their debut at New York City's Madison Square Garden — but the specter of 9/11, quite naturally, hung over the show. "It's going to be very heavy playing there in light of the World Trade Center tragedy," Chancellor told The Record .

"We're still stunned by what happened, just like everybody else is. It was horrible, but we have to heal. We're just a band, but if we can just take someone away from all of that and they can smile for a little bit because of us, we've done something worthwhile."

10. "Schism" beat out Black Sabbath, Slayer, Slipknot and System of a Down for the 2002 "Best Metal Performance" Grammy Award. The best part, though, is that Carey playfully thanked the Prince of Darkness onstage during their acceptance speech. "Thanks to my parents for putting up with me, and I want to thank Satan," the drummer joked, according to MTV . Meanwhile, Chancellor saluted his dad "for doing [ his ] mom." Tool: heavy, trippy and classy.

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tool lateralus tour

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  2. Story Behind Tool Lateralus Album After 20 Years

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  5. Tool live during the Lateralus tour Tumblr, Tours, Live, Concert, Quick

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VIDEO

  1. TOOL

  2. Reflection 2002. REMASTERED. The Lateralus Tour

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  4. Lateralus Piano Tutorial #2

  5. TOOL. Disposition LIVE 2002. Lateralus Tour Remastered

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COMMENTS

  1. List of Tool concert tours

    Tool in Concert: 2023-2024 Steel Beans, Emily Wolfe, Elder, Night Verses: Festivals. Tour Role Years Aftershock Festival: Headline 2016, 2019, 2023 ... "Lateralus" 10,000 Days tour, Austin, Texas, on November 14, 2007 Sebastian Thomson: Drums: Trans Am "Lateralus" 10,000 Days tour, Victoria BC on December 1, 2007 Jello Biafra:

  2. I identified the guitars that Maynard played on the Lateralus tour

    I've seen videos of him during the lateralis tour cycle of him playing it during schism, but I don't hear where he's playing it in these live videos I don't know myself, but came across this Tool forum post that suggests the following: Schism - uses it only to harmonize with open "a" notes before the heavier version of the main riff.

  3. Tool Concert & Tour History (Updated for 2024)

    Tool tours & concert list along with photos, videos, and setlists of their live performances. Search Browse Concert Archives ... (1996), which included the band's first Grammy-winning single, also called "Ænima." "Lateralus" (2001), the band's third album, was the first of three to consecutively top the US Billboard 200 chart. It was ...

  4. Tool Pushing Ahead With Live DVD From 'Lateralus' Tour

    Enigmatic alternative metal icons Tool are pushing ahead with a live Blu-ray/DVD offering. The band's drummer Danny Carey was recently interviewed by Cleveland Scene and spoke of their plans, stating that it will be "a good mind blower for all the hardcore fans" and that "most of it will be from the 'Lateralus' tour from 2002.". Meanwhile, the band recently issued an updated ...

  5. Tool Concert Map by tour: Lateralus

    View the concert map Statistics of Tool for the tour Lateralus! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow. Setlists; Artists; Festivals; Venues; Statistics Stats; News; Forum; Show ... Lateralus (96) North America Winter Tour 2012 (18) North American Fall Tour 2023 (30) North American Tour 2014 (14)

  6. Who got to see the contortionists perform on the Lateralus tour and

    Yes! Saw them several times on the lateralus tour. They sure seemed alien like. Previously, Tool visuals consisted of videos of human bodies moving around, their music videos and of course Maynard dancing… then they brought out these "creatures" as well as new 3D renderings and Alex Grey work which was so cool and out of this world.

  7. The story behind Tool's Lateralus: "A real moment of ...

    It was against this unpromising backdrop that Tool crafted their most ambitious and unashamedly progressive album to date. Released on May 15, 2001, Lateralus hit No.1 on the Billboard 200 album chart and went on to outsell the likes of Jay-Z, Eminem and Madonna for the year. And it did all this despite being darker, stranger and weirder than the band's previous albums, taking them from the ...

  8. Tool on tour Lateralus

    Tool on tour Lateralus Tool performed 96 concerts on tour Lateralus, between Andrews Amphitheater on November 10, 2001 and Tabernacle on May 15, 2001. 2001 10 Nov. Andrews Amphitheater Lateralus. Honolulu United States. 2001 8 Nov. Tacoma Dome Lateralus. Tacoma United States. 2001 7 Nov. General Motors Place Lateralus.

  9. Tool Average Setlists of tour: Lateralus

    2010 Summer Tour (20) 2019 European Tour (15) 2019 U.S. Tour (9) European Tour 2024 (14) Fear Inoculum (49) Fear Inoculum 2nd Leg (57) Inside The Outside (119) Lateralus (96) North America Winter Tour 2012 (18) North American Fall Tour 2023 (30) North American Tour 2014 (14) North American Tour 2016 (22) North American Tour 2017 (20) Opiate (63)

  10. Tool Concert Setlist at Madison Square Garden, New York on October 1

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Tool Setlist of the concert at Madison Square Garden, New York, NY, USA on October 1, 2001 from the Lateralus Tour and other Tool Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  11. The untold story of Tool's Lateralus at 20

    2021 is the year that Tool's Lateralus hits 20 years old! While there's no indication the band will celebrate (yet) Kerrang have celebrated with a new, and insightful interview with bassist Justin Chancellor. He reveals quite a bit about the writing of the album, and the tensions surrounding it. Even going as far as saying Tool spent the ...

  12. Lateralus

    Lateralus (/ ˌ l æ t ə ˈ r æ l ə s /) is the third studio album by the American rock band Tool.It was released on May 15, 2001, through Volcano Entertainment.The album was recorded at Cello Studios in Hollywood and The Hook, Big Empty Space, and The Lodge, in North Hollywood, between October 2000 and January 2001. David Bottrill, who had produced the band's two previous releases Ænima ...

  13. Tool 'Lateralus' Review 20 Years Later

    Tool packed that sucker to the damn brim. Lateralus, which turns 20 years old this Saturday, uses every bit of real estate a compact disc can offer, both figuratively and quite literally. It's a ...

  14. How good was the Lateralus tour? : r/ToolBand

    Peak Tool in regards to live performance is probably somewhere around 96-98...at least for Maynard's vocals. Instrumentally, they probably have been at their best from 2006 on. You can really tell that Adam's guitar playing improved quite a bit in the last 10-15 years or so. Reply.

  15. 10 Things You Didn't Know About Tool's 'Lateralus'

    If you fell for that one, you had it coming. 4. Tool fans and other pranksters helped the spread of Lateralus disinformation before the album release. Back in the Wild West days of Napster leaks, numerous fake tracks circulated online — to the point where fan sites were forced to play referee.

  16. Review: Tool, Lateralus

    Review: Tool, Lateralus. The old Tool is back with a vengeance. Almost. by Aaron Scott. June 28, 2001. Only a band like Tool, one that has all but created its own genre, can get a seven-minute epic played on the radio. Only a band like Tool can disappear for five years and reemerge bigger and stronger than ever.

  17. Tool (band)

    Back on tour by April, Tool appeared on June 15 as a headliner at the Bonnaroo Music Festival with a guest appearance from Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello on "Lateralus". Meanwhile, "Vicarious" was a nominee for Best Hard Rock Performance and 10,000 Days won Best Recording Package at the 49th Grammy Awards . [76]

  18. The Tool Page: Tour Reviews

    This was this reviewer's 2NDH Tool show. Just got back great concert, heres the set list: the grudge stinkfist undertow 46 & 2 eulogy shcism w/ maynard on guitar disposition reflection intermission w/ contortionists parabol parabola eon blu apocalypse the patient aenima lateralus ... guitar disposition reflection intermission w/ contortionists ...

  19. Tool Concert Setlist at Alliant Energy Center, Madison on September 7

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Tool Setlist of the concert at Alliant Energy Center, Madison, WI, USA on September 7, 2001 from the Lateralus Tour and other Tool Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  20. Tool

    Faaip de Oiad Lyrics. 61.9K. About "Lateralus". Lateralus is the third album by the band Tool. The album was subject to a great deal of both fan and critical anticipation, at the time of its ...

  21. Tool Official Store

    Ænima Und Keine Eier Apron. $30.00. Tool Twist Women's Zip Hoodie. $48.00. $60.00. Welcome to the Tool Official Store! Shop for officially licensed Tool band merchandise, tour gear, apparel, accessories, and the Fear Innoculum collection.

  22. Lateralus by Tool Reviews and Tracks

    Lateralus takes the L.A. band over the edge with elongated musical movements that simmer under heavy-duty distortion, Middle Eastern percussion and freakish guitar-and-drum time signatures that will make musical mathematicians (i.e., prog-rock dorks) as excited as the kids in the mosh pit.

  23. Tool Tour Statistics: 2001

    Lateralus (96) North America Winter Tour ... Pacific Tour 2013 (9) Tool Music Clinic 2018 (10) Undertow (245) Winter Tour 2024 (23) Ænima (153) Songs; Albums; Avg Setlist; Covers; With; Concert Map; Songs played by year: 2001. This table lists how often a song was performed by Tool in 2001. Multiple performances from the same setlist are also ...

  24. About

    TOOL Lateralus Tour TOOL Concert, Portland, 2020 At a gallery in Santa Monica [1999], Alex meets Adam Jones, lead guitarist for Tool, beginning a decades-long association of Alex Grey's art with the band's intense rock music. Grey provided art for Lateralus (2001), 10,000 Days (2006), and Fear Inoculum (2019) albums and numerous stage ...