Tool album

Album   Released Publisher Rating
Salival (CD/VHS) 2000 Volcano Records
Undertow (Clean) 1993 Volcano Records
Back to the topSalival (CD/VHS)
Review by Heather Phares, All Music Guide
Released:
December 12, 2000
Label:
Volcano Records
Rating:
Genre:
Pop/Rock
Styles:
Heavy Metal
Alternative Metal
After a four-year hiatus, Tool returns with the elaborately packaged Salival set, which includes a 70-minute CD of previously unreleased live and studio material, a 56-page book of photos and video stills, and a VHS/DVD collection of the group's impressive stop-motion videos. Live versions of "Hush," "Part of Me," "Push It," and "Third Eye" reaffirm the band's standing as one of alternative metal's most compelling live acts; unreleased studio tracks such as "Message to Harry Manback II" and "L.A. Municipal Court" definitely sound like abandoned material, but offer a look at Tool's quirkier side. Covers of Led Zeppelin's "No Quarter" and "You Lied" -- a song by bassist Justin Chancellor's previous group Peach -- round out the disc's better-than-average selection of odds and sods. The DVD version of Salival also includes a live duet of "Hush" with Tori Amos and singer Maynard Keenan. Salival's intricate, eclectic look and sound give it the feel of a "thank you" to patient Tool fans; fortunately for them -- and the band -- it was worth the wait.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Third Eye (Live) 14:05 Carey, Jones, Keenan, Chancellor
2 Part of Me (Live) 3:32 Carey, DAmour, Jones, Keenan
3 Pushit (Live) 13:56 Carey, Jones, Keenan, Chancellor
4 Message to Harry Manback, No. 2 1:14 Carey, Jones, Keenan, Chancellor
5 Merkaba (Live) 9:17 Carey, Jones, Keenan, Chancellor
6 You Lied (Live) 9:48 Durling, Oakes, Keenan, Chancellor
7 No Quarter 11:12 Page, Plant, Jones
8 L.A.M.C. 10:53 Carey, Jones, Keenan, Chancellor
Back to the topUndertow (Clean)
Review by Rob Theakston, All Music Guide
Released:
1993
Label:
Volcano Records
Rating:
Genre:
Pop/Rock
Styles:
Alternative Metal
Progressive Metal
Heavy Metal
Just as grunge was reaching its boiling point and radio-friendly punk-pop loomed on the horizon, Tool released Undertow, which firmly reinforced metal's prominence as a musical style -- but, for once, it had something worthwhile to say. At the forefront of Tool's commercial explosion were striking, haunting visuals that complemented the album's nihilistic yet wistful mood. Drawing equal inspiration from Black Sabbath, alternative theories of science, and Eastern religions, Tool's abrasive sonic assault begins from the opening notes and continues through the final moments of the last composition, an open mockery of organized religion and its incapacity for original thought. With its technical brilliance, musical complexities, and aggressive overtones, Undertow not only paved the way for several bands to break through to the mainstream adolescent mall-rage demographic, it also proved that metal could be simultaneously intelligent, emotional, and brutal. [Undertow was also issued as a clean version for those purchasing their release at family-friendly outlets and for those with a sensitive constitution to profanity but still want to rock.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Intolerance 4:54 Tool [1]
2 Prison Sex 4:56 Tool [1]
3 Sober 5:06 Carey, DAmour, Jones, Keenan
4 Bottom 7:14 Rollins, Tool [1]
5 Crawl Away 5:29 Tool [1]
6 Swamp Song 5:31 Tool [1]
7 Undertow 5:22 Tool [1]
8 6:03 Tool [1]
9 Flood 7:45 Tool [1]
10 Disgustipated 16:15 Tool [1]
Related Pages
Table of Contents