Yes! Keep the Tool songs coming. I agree Tools lyrics and music are pretty deep. Try pulling the lyrics up on another device. Tool is just a musical experience as well. Ive seen them live many times. Best band ever. Im going to recommend "The Grudge" for your list.
Definitely check out early TOOL like the songs Opiate and Sweat and the new stuff like Invincible and Culling Voices to see how much the band has evolved over the years. Oh and 46 and 2 just because it’s amazing haha
Esta canción es más popera en buen sentido, me hace recordar a los riffs de Flea (RHCP) y algo de FNM ( Faith no More) . He escuchado algunas de tool en los 90s , eran más fuertes acercando más al metal progresivo ( seguro es por la época , se adapta al tiempo). Y escucho en los primeros minutos el clásico bajo de las canciones anemia, schism. En fin es como para escucharla en un pub.La voz de Manyard es muy melodiosa en esta canción.
I think you "get" it. Lol. Some thoughts are, I think the Tool Army will waterboard you with a playlist sufficient to keep you busy for a while. I'm not going to tell you which song to do, you'll figure it out on your own most likely. EVERY SONG is your favorite song when you're listening to it at the time (when the band is Tool). Here are the albums and some oversimplified summaries for you to sort of categorize in your mind: Aenema - "early" stuff but first album that features the lineup of the musicians as they currently are. That wicked bass guitar you hear is Justin Chancellor. If you want to hear the first song he wrote for Tool it was on this album, a song called 46 & 2. You'll see it all over youtube reactions because its a fan fav. I'm not recommending it and I'm not NOT recommending it. But yes I do love the song. AENEMA is the bridge between the band's "angry" phase and its "revelatory" or spiritual stuff that will come later. I can't think of a bad song on it. I will say that there is a song on Aenema called Pushit that has a MUCH BETTER RENDITION in the live version "Pushit - Salival version". Again, don't take my lead on this I'm just stating facts. Lateralus - this album probably cemented Tool as great composers. Literally when this came out it was in the middle of the "nu-metal" phase where every band sounded the same and apparently angry for no reason. It was record label marketing. But when Lateralus opens you just knew you were in for a different dimension. If the band broke up after Lateralus I think people would still believe the album was possibly one of the best rock/metal albums ever made. This is definitely spiritual music. A lot of people seem to have used this album to work through a ton of personal pain. It is cerebral, it is mysterious, and it can also be HARD . It is infused with a lot of eastern religious ideas without promoting religion - more like an audio exploration of the internal self. It opens strong and it crescendos in the title track and lands beautifully from beginning to end. 10,000 Days - I think this was the band's "hardest" sound. Probably most of the reactions on youtube are of songs from this album. IT was also the last album released before the 15 YEAR DRY SPELL that Tool imposed on its fans before releasing the latest album last year. A great deal of the heavy hitters on this album revolve around the lead singer's mother, her illness (explored in Lateralus - she was paralyzed form either a stroke or an aneurism so there's a persistent them of transcending your physical body). Fear Inoculum - Released last year. Slow burn. POTENT. I think a lot of folks at first thought "dammnit they sound the same" after the first listen. After MANY listens you come to realize these guys layered and added depth to their past work and the orchestration was PHENOMENAL. I think it embodies all of the meaning of their past work in sort of a master class of like 25 years of shared musical experience and THIS has probably replaced Lateralus as the band's magnum opus (my opinion). Again, slow burn. You find the hard "pockets" of sound in certain parts of each song whereas 10,000 days some songs were "hard" throughout. I"m a musical ignoramous. I just think this album beats deep inside your soul. Did they have othe ralbums before Aenema? Yes. I don't include them because I am a biased piece of shit and I LOVE Justin Chancellor. There's Opiate (which isn't a full album) and Undertow (their first full length studio album). Very 90's. Very very good. Just not as well composed, not as layered, and no Justin Chancellor. Don't listen to me. I"m a biased pice of shit. LMAO.
@paula I did mention it. And no, in no universe is Undertow their best work. I mentioned it at the end -- as with all things in life, with dedication they got better with time. The first stuff is NOT the best stuff [or they could have stopped there]. Thank God they didn't.
"Vicarious" would be a great follow-up to this song. It's also a high energy track that I think you will greatly enjoy!
Try Vicarious next, another awesome song from this album. Also has a strong message.
We all need it.
Dancing to Tool? Awesome!! Hope you react to more Tool songs, enjoy the journey! 👽
Yes! Keep the Tool songs coming. I agree Tools lyrics and music are pretty deep. Try pulling the lyrics up on another device. Tool is just a musical experience as well. Ive seen them live many times. Best band ever. Im going to recommend "The Grudge" for your list.
Do Lateralus next.
👽WELCOME TO THE TOOL ARMY👽
I think you will dig Jambi!
Great reaction!More Tool please!Try 46&2!Keep up the great work!🤟🏻
Definitely check out early TOOL like the songs Opiate and Sweat and the new stuff like Invincible and Culling Voices to see how much the band has evolved over the years. Oh and 46 and 2 just because it’s amazing haha
Esta canción es más popera en buen sentido, me hace recordar a los riffs de Flea (RHCP) y algo de FNM ( Faith no More) . He escuchado algunas de tool en los 90s , eran más fuertes acercando más al metal progresivo ( seguro es por la época , se adapta al tiempo). Y escucho en los primeros minutos el clásico bajo de las canciones anemia, schism. En fin es como para escucharla en un pub.La voz de Manyard es muy melodiosa en esta canción.
Ok... more Tool plz 🤘 lol try their new album next
Great reaction! Nothing better than seeing newbies 🤗 I will sub to take the journey with you!
Great video! Hope to see you do more Tool. Be well ✌
In general terms the song is about hypocrisy
They were a lot younger then T.T
The Pot calling the Kettle black. Lyrics is just a bunch of old sayings about hypocrisy
Lateralus next, then Jambi! 🙏
a little bit of a Jimi Hendrix vibe ... distinct drums from a far distant sound ..
Oh react to Danny Carey drum cam its epic
I did!
Pot Is a colloquial way to say marijuana
may be
maybe something more
Yeahhh
@@olganowak9414 Pot refers to Marijuana as well as the old saying "the pot calling the kettle black"-fitting with song's theme of hypocrisy.
Subscribed for more Tool! Spiral out my friend!
Try having the lyrics pulled up on another device. You'll have a much better idea of what the song is trying to portray.
I think you "get" it. Lol. Some thoughts are, I think the Tool Army will waterboard you with a playlist sufficient to keep you busy for a while. I'm not going to tell you which song to do, you'll figure it out on your own most likely. EVERY SONG is your favorite song when you're listening to it at the time (when the band is Tool).
Here are the albums and some oversimplified summaries for you to sort of categorize in your mind:
Aenema - "early" stuff but first album that features the lineup of the musicians as they currently are. That wicked bass guitar you hear is Justin Chancellor. If you want to hear the first song he wrote for Tool it was on this album, a song called 46 & 2. You'll see it all over youtube reactions because its a fan fav. I'm not recommending it and I'm not NOT recommending it. But yes I do love the song. AENEMA is the bridge between the band's "angry" phase and its "revelatory" or spiritual stuff that will come later. I can't think of a bad song on it. I will say that there is a song on Aenema called Pushit that has a MUCH BETTER RENDITION in the live version "Pushit - Salival version". Again, don't take my lead on this I'm just stating facts.
Lateralus - this album probably cemented Tool as great composers. Literally when this came out it was in the middle of the "nu-metal" phase where every band sounded the same and apparently angry for no reason. It was record label marketing. But when Lateralus opens you just knew you were in for a different dimension. If the band broke up after Lateralus I think people would still believe the album was possibly one of the best rock/metal albums ever made. This is definitely spiritual music. A lot of people seem to have used this album to work through a ton of personal pain. It is cerebral, it is mysterious, and it can also be HARD . It is infused with a lot of eastern religious ideas without promoting religion - more like an audio exploration of the internal self. It opens strong and it crescendos in the title track and lands beautifully from beginning to end.
10,000 Days - I think this was the band's "hardest" sound. Probably most of the reactions on youtube are of songs from this album. IT was also the last album released before the 15 YEAR DRY SPELL that Tool imposed on its fans before releasing the latest album last year. A great deal of the heavy hitters on this album revolve around the lead singer's mother, her illness (explored in Lateralus - she was paralyzed form either a stroke or an aneurism so there's a persistent them of transcending your physical body).
Fear Inoculum - Released last year. Slow burn. POTENT. I think a lot of folks at first thought "dammnit they sound the same" after the first listen. After MANY listens you come to realize these guys layered and added depth to their past work and the orchestration was PHENOMENAL. I think it embodies all of the meaning of their past work in sort of a master class of like 25 years of shared musical experience and THIS has probably replaced Lateralus as the band's magnum opus (my opinion). Again, slow burn. You find the hard "pockets" of sound in certain parts of each song whereas 10,000 days some songs were "hard" throughout. I"m a musical ignoramous. I just think this album beats deep inside your soul.
Did they have othe ralbums before Aenema? Yes. I don't include them because I am a biased piece of shit and I LOVE Justin Chancellor. There's Opiate (which isn't a full album) and Undertow (their first full length studio album). Very 90's. Very very good. Just not as well composed, not as layered, and no Justin Chancellor. Don't listen to me. I"m a biased pice of shit. LMAO.
@paula I did mention it. And no, in no universe is Undertow their best work. I mentioned it at the end -- as with all things in life, with dedication they got better with time. The first stuff is NOT the best stuff [or they could have stopped there]. Thank God they didn't.
To many words
Ya que estás en grupos clasicos de hace .más treinta años mandate con otra banda.
Ya que estás en grupos clasicos de más de veinte años mandate con otra banda.
First!!