the moment is upon us Toolians, we have arrived to the grudge
Yeah but like I was saying in a different comment, there are still so many good Tool songs that Geebz has yet to make a vid on, 4 Degrees, Undertow, Prison Sex, Sweat, Opiate, Ticks & Leaches,Hooker with a Penis, shit it'll take years to do all the songs that are worth "reacting to " just by Tool.
@@williamcozart8158 Maybe he could react to, or rather simply review, certain anthologies of songs, and explore narratives and other details which is often missed when you single out songs. I'm thinking Lost Keys -> Rosetta Stoned (-> Intension, imho) or both parts of Wings of Marie. Or why not a complete album, but as a whole. It's fun to do, I wish I could do it all over again.
@@williamcozart8158 look at it this way; once he's done, we'll have a new Tool record
Respiratory physiologist here: that's what a full inhalation followed by holding a note until you reach your residual volume and run out of air to pass over your vocal cords sounds like. Just astonishing control.
Really cool to have a scientific explanation of what is happening during this singer's action.
@@mayatrash Sure: in standard spirometry tests we ask participants to take a few practice inhalations and exhalations, and then inhale maximally. Then we ask them to breath out as hard and as fast as they can, until they cannot go any further. The point they reach, where they are literally "out of air" is called the residual volume - the air in your lungs is just there to stop the tubes collapsing. You can't pass that air over your vocal cords, and so it is impossible to make any sounds when you get there. MJK's trick is (as I hear it) to go through that process slowly, holding a note (passing whatever air he has over the cords). Listen carefully, and you can hear him reach the end of his breath. Knowing Tool, there is some meaning in letting go of something as basic as your own breath. Or maybe I'm overthinking...
6:47 "what an amazing scream"
oh boy....
Yeah, he had no idea what was coming...😂 Way back when this came out, me and my buddy got out the stop watch for THE scream...I don't really remember anymore exactly how long it was, but I'm pretty sure it's something like 21 or 26 seconds long...I can't even exhale that long, let alone busy out a scream like that... Truly amazing man that MJK, truly amazing...
Edit: scream is from 16:34 to 16:58... So 24 seconds... JFC that's ridiculousness in all it's glory!
Everyone familiar with the song got a little happy when he said that.
Also: payoff at 16:33
Without getting long winded about this...let’s go back to the origins of man. Lol. Love this guy. Thanks for this one.
@@gossegotha it’s like when some people say “no offense, but...”. But in a good way.
The Tool Army Salutes you Sir! 🪖 Please 🙏🥺 Please react to either Descending or Invincible off the New Album. We will ALL be reporting for Duty as well. Yer a good Man GeebZ 🤙
Right?!? My jaw hit the ground when he launched into that one. And he's right, he gets it.
6:45 "what a amazing scream"
*I immediately start rubbing my hands thinking about THAT part*
"oooohhhhhhh ho ho ho ho you didn't see nothing, Geebz"
Oh Yeah. Didn’t disappoint. Aaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh👀hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh😳hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh😱😱😱😱😱😱hhghhggggggggggg
I saw Tool perform The Grudge in Charlotte, NC on Oct 6th 2001. The scream is legit and it was glorious. They opened with it (rightfully so) and his voice was still on point the rest of the show. The man is a machine.
@@Dubstyles84 Heck yeah! The thing we were probably most fortunate to have seen at that show was Disposition/Reflection/Triad.
I saw them on that tour in Australia. As soon as they opened with the Grudge I was waiting for that scream. Low and behold he went for it and hit it perfectly. What a freak!!!!
I was there man.... I was there. Saw em Greenville SC too with Tomahawk.
I was there too.. the cool air blew across the pavilion, we stood outside in the fall air getting our minds blown. Remember the aerial acrobats who swung upside down for minutes during “Lateralus”..? Idk how they didn’t pass out from the blood rushing to their heads. Just pumped, one back and forth, the other side to side, through the whole song. “Swing on the spiral….”
Great stuff. Period.
"Then Maynard comes in and delivers The Peoples' Elbow..." Hahahahaha
The Grudge might genuinely be Tools best track. It has it all, the power, the softness, the rhythm changes, the feeling, that otherwordly scream AND it's more accessible than many other tracks. Just a near perfect song.
I totally agree it's my favorite Tool song. It's so fucking intense, I get goosebumps every single time even after listening to it more times than I can count. Amazing song
I would actually argue Lateralus is superior, but I can completely understand where you're coming from. Can't hate on another Tool fan's opinion
@@nar2130 top notch profile picture, type o is my favorite band of all time👌
For everyone saying "do this Tool song or that Tool song", just do every Tool song eventually. There's really none worth skipping
Best Maynard scream...."Ticks and Leaches"
There's a lot of great Maynard screams.😁 My personal favorite is in Bottom, gives me chicken skin every time! 🔥
Not necessarily a scream, but his vocals in 'Thomas' from APC are INCREDIBLE
@@randoliof that goes without saying; I cant think of a time that his vocals were not incredible.
And that... is how you begin an album!
6:47 "what an amazing scream at the end"
wait for it :)
I thought the exact same thing when he said that. I was like "oh just you wait!!!"
I've seen them lead off four concerts with The Grudge, three of them since 2017... The scream is real, and it's spectacular.
He did it at the in 2019 in Philly. Saw them in AC 4 days later in jersey. He does what he wants
I hope he does this when I go to see him in February. This has been my favorite song since I was 6 years old. (21 now)
Lateralus (actually all Tool albums) is worth an Album review..nothing less!!
danny's outro is absolutely insane. I love to picture him just calmly placing his sticks on the snare and calmly breathing out after he's done
"what an amazing scream..." **hasn't made it to the end yet**
:D
What six lunatics disliked this amazing man's amazing reaction to this amazing band's amazing track?
First concert : Tool live October 2001 Orlando, FL. Will never forget that scream
I missed them during the Lateralus tour, was totally bummed. But my first time seeing them was in Orlando @Lollapalooza '93, again in Orlando in '96 & '06 and @Ozzfest in West Palm Beach in '98, I think it was. They are Amazing!!
First show for me was tool in 2001 as well in Minneapolis. Changed my life
Ticks and leaches off this album is amazing. Danny goes full on octopus in it :-).
This song is basically an exorcism "tool" for your soul. Let go of those grudges. Turn them from lead into gold.
I normally don't get *too* personal in CZcams comments, but since you went there and it's way past my bedtime...
I may not be able to scream like Maynard (one time I tried to sustain the same pitch as a clean sung note just as a test and I fell off 5.5 seconds before his ends 🙈) but I always inhale deeply right before *that part* and simply allowing his scream to "come from" me is a full cathartic release. I have, ya know, neighbors, so I have to settle for a calm exhale while he loses his shit 😅
I always say Maynard expresses things so we don't have to fully feel them.
Tool is mesmerizing. Period. No other band is as mesmeric while at the same time being exciting and heavy and philosophically potent. I know, hyperbole. But fuckit. I'm just glad Tool arrived around the same time I was coming up.
That change into the “Saturn comes back around” is one of my favorite TOOL riffs.
Plugging my vote for Invincible as your next reaction from TOOL, and Pet from A Perfect Circle
Maybe the Rolling Stones’ “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” for TBT?
I love that riff. My 2nd favorite is ending of The Pot. 3rd is that bassline in Rosetta Stoned.
@@OleksandrMilkovskyi Rosetta Stoned is the funniest song ever. People really need to pull up the lyrics on that one. Great bassline for sure.
Geebz reacts to The Grudge on my birthday....yes yes YES!!!👍👍🤘🤘 Today is indeed a good day.
@@KeyOfGeebz Thank you, man! Keep up the good work!🤙 I wish I could experience this song for the first time again. After 20 years it still gets me EVERY SINGLE TIME. Man.....that scream!🤭😲 And Danny’s finale......just wow.
This is quite possibly one of the greatest albums ever recorded. The Grudge, Schism, Parabol/Parabola, Reflection...so many great songs. A true masterpiece
the best opening song for one of the best albums of all time...and that ending (starting from maynard's scream) is pure katharsis
This and “them bones” off dirt and definitely the 2 best album opening songs of all time
You have no idea how happy I am that you just happened to pause at 15:16 instead of a tiny bit later, this whole sequence building up to that INSANE scream needs to be heard in full and I'm glad you got to experience it
Insta click, Awwwright! Can’t wait for you to do The Patient!
For some reason I had it in my mind Geebz already did the Patient but you are right he still needs to do that one. Holy crap.
'in "ticks and leeches" from this album danny uses his drumset as a freight train
I would love you to do ‘Eulogy’, one of my favourite Tool tracks.
Definitely...I know the newer albums are addicting. Their message is a lot different and more positive. But I think he needs to delve a little harder into Undertow and Aenima. It gives more appreciation for the progression. The anger on Opitate and Undertow brings a different sort if intensity. Then it tames a bit on Aenima, but is definitely still there.
Yes yes yes yesss... One of the unfortunate things I've noticed is once people delve into Lateralus or 10,000 Days, they don't look back at ÆNIMA, Undertow and Opiate (the latter two especially). Less refined/ calculated. Very raw. But there's a place for that in their evolution as a band that makes me appreciate them soooo much more.
@Mighty Dingus its funny that you describe the Lateralus album in that sense since the first song is literally about letting go of that anger.
@@ashtonderojas821 No bud, I was describing the others as that. And that Lateralus is literally the opposite. But in order to really appreciate the turnaround in their style, you should really go thru the old ones first.
@@ashtonderojas821 Maybe it's weird, but I've been listening to Tool for a very long time. In mind I still consider Lateralus a "newer" album 😅...but I suppose it isn't, and hasn't been for a long time. But it's so vastly different than everything before it, that's it's always been that way to me.
Letting go of his grudges that wear on his soul - that primordial scream!
IMO the outro drum lick/part/pattern whatever you wanna call it, is one of the greatest drum recordings of all-time.
First time I listened to this song I immediately thought..."Holy s***, this is only the 1st track!!!! 🤣🤘😱
Yup. Some bands would do the hole album in the mean time, if counting riffs or patterns... xD
I love watching his eyes and his little expressions when he gets blown away by what Tool’s doing.
I love that you said “the cantor”. The cant whether it be tribal, Shakespeare, KJV Bible, Latin Mass, modern music, rhythm puts our minds into a receptive place. That’s a fabulous observation. Thanks for that. 👍👍
He can 100 percent pull off that scream live and it’s amazing!
Said it before and I say it again. Watching Geebz breakdowns is like visiting your older brother who talked to you about music since you were kids
I love that he said something about how they are tribal, thats exactly the way I always described them to new listeners
YES. Way to go Geebz. Descending or Invincible next please.
Aaaaand there it is! The Grudge. Masterpiece. David Bottrill made the best sounding Tool albums. Do not forget the "hidden" gems of Aenima: Jimmy, Pushit and H. Each a journey on their own.
I love how you made the connection with Tool almost being Tribal... Honestly that makes SO much sense to me. I believe tool made their music to help humanity and yeah, they take it back raw and Tribal sometimes. I love it 🤙
I don’t know if I speak for everyone, but I really love these longer videos, where you really go into detail about your reactions. We all know the song. We watch these videos to hear your thoughts about it. It seems like you sometimes cut yourself short for fear of going on too long, and again maybe it’s just me, but I prefer it when you take the time to really explain what you’re thinking.
Anyway, excellent breakdown to an excellent song. Flood is another great Tool song from early on - their first masterpiece, in my opinion. I also agree with others who recommended H. And, of course, I’m patiently waiting to watch your breakdown of The Patient. Awwwright!
Nice word play!
I agree, I can't really say much because I always feel like I should say less, but every time he apologizes for stopping I want to grab him and say "PLEASE SPEAK FOR THREE HOURS ON THIS ONE SONG WE WILL HANG ON EVERY WORD."
Oop. I didn't mean to use word play myself. Hmm. How about, "I have no room to talk because I always feel like I talk too much"
Wait, no.
NOT TO BE HYPOCRITICAL GIVEN THAT I ALWAYS FEEL LIKE I'M SAYING TOO MUCH.
There. No word play 😂🙈
I need sleep.
Yes, that primal scream was real and it’s glorious!!!🔥🔥
I've had the privilege of seeing Maynard do that scream live and, yes, it is magnificent! He bent over backward until his mohawk hit the floor and then using only his abs screamed all the way up to standing! Crazy! I was so happy to see this song today, I was waiting for you to cover it, thanks so much!
Maynard used to do the whole scream in earlier concerts, but it seems like he cut it out recently. (example: czcams.com/video/e66QL8CT1rc/video.html )
you’re correct- it’s enhanced, or whatever you call it. I’m sure that’s why they quit doing it live for a few years
@@cndluluv Maynard said once in some interview that he has a hard time singing cleanly after the screaming parts, so he prefers set lists for Tool shows to have songs that are all either the more "screamy" songs, or all "clean" singing songs. He said he can do the screamy thing still, but he has a hard time transitioning back to the clean voice after screams, so he prefers one or the other, a Tool set with their more "heavy screamy" songs or the set lists with the more melodic and cleaner sung vocals, but he doesn't like to do both on the same set. As for the records, he has said he is more into the melodic aspects, being more of an instrument with his voice rather than being the main focus in the song, or "taking up more real estate in the mix" as I believe I have heard Geebz say before. MJK also says he is just not an angry young man anymore, and that he had to like, "scream out at the world" or something like that and has now gotten most of it out of his system. I can see that being true.
So excited to watch this! One request, when you do The Patient, please do the minute long track that comes before it as well, Eon Blue Apocalypse. Absolutely critical 💜
Haha. "Is that what I thought it was?" Yes. Yes it was.
The Patient is a great song off this album. The bass is a driving force for the song.
I don't know how it took me until the last few weeks to find that one but it's been near to my heart (as well as my music nerd brain) since I did.
Since Tool has plenty of short "filler" songs on their albums, I recommend that you listen to some of them right before you do a full song. Many of these filler songs are lead-ins to the full song that plays next. For example, listen to "Eon Blue Apocalypse" right before your listen of "The Patient". I'd love to get your reactions to the short songs that are more in context with the full songs.. otherwise, the short songs wouldn't make much sense to react to alone.
I like to think of "Eon" as the palate cleanser after how powerful The Grudge is, into how emotional The Patient is. It works so well, and really holds it together.
eon blue apocalypse clearly exists to smooth tension after the fiery vibrations of Triad before going into the contemplative night sky depiction that is Reflection.
17:04 yes, he truly did that himself. Long time ago tho. Not anymore. There is a video on YT wuth them performing this song live back in 2002 and MJK does what you have heard on the record.
There was no way to prepare for just how badass this track and album was the first time you heard it. The musical event of 2001.
I love seeing people react when Danny Carey starts doing Danny Carey things!
saw them live in 2001 and I can honestly say that Maynard hit that whole scream live and multiple times live from 2001-2002
My favorite Tool track. It's been 20 years and that ending gets me EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
He gets a little technological assistance now days (age is a bitch), but yeah, at the time that was a legit scream.
Age + COVID long-hauler + Other projects. Maynard is hands down most energetic/enthusiastic with Puscifer nowadays.
God I loved the expressions on your face on that extended scream!
Saw this tour in Cleveland 2001. Less than a week after 09/11 and it was surreal. It was the first normal thing I had done after the Towers. Yes the scream happened.
Yes The Patient please. Love the clockwork vibe of that song.
6:47 "what an amazing scream at the end" me: oooooh buddy you dont even know how right you are yet
It’s about time! One of the best songs ever recorded.
Wear the grudge like a crown… this song live is an experience- epic
“What an amazing scream at the end…” lmao 🤣 can’t know how many people laughed at this part of the beginning of video
Had to watch this review twice it was so good. Very authentic review my friend.
Awwright Geebz..The Grudge!! Tool are one of my all time favourite bands, ever! That scream is the best!! Great reaction..thank you, sir!
You know I’ve been waiting for this one for so long, Geebz!! “Clutch it like cornerstone, otherwise it all comes down.”
Just hearing that scream gives me an instant boost of testosterone
TOOL LIVE, SOUNDS EXACTLY LIKE THEIR ALBUMS!!! Greatest musicians on earth!!
Saw that song for the first time in 02 and yes he did that live.
Today is a different story. He uses his equipment to help him and it is not as long I think.
The tour they did when the album debuted, MJK absolutely roared like that in live performances and it was nothing short of breathtaking. In the last 5 years or so, his voice (very understandably) is aging and he’ll remain quiet in such sections of the songs.
I saw them in 2002. The Grudge was one of the best performances of the night, and that scream sounded like the studio version. It was unbelievable to see. Maynard has some pipes.
First time I saw Tool was at alternate nation festival. Melbourne Australia. Last minute for replacement for the Chilli Peppers. Front row of the mosh when Maynard used to be upfront and used to really thrash and body bang. He was painted blue like he was signing Sober directly to me .. Changed my life. Have travelled around the world and seen them play on just about every continent. They never disappoint. Now I have kids of my own and they are Tool fans and are starting to understand music is a powerful tool and musicians have a responsibility to speak for those that dont have a voice. Proudest dad moment when my 13-year-oldand quoted Tool lyrics from Parabola in a school debate about spiritual awakening, interconnectedness and unity.
Have you ever done a reaction to Alice in Chains? "Rotten Apple" from their Jar of Flies EP is one of my favorites.
I heard when he first recorded that scream he almost passed out.
The big scream on this song changes a man
I was waiting for your reaction to the scream, lol. Yeah, that's all him, man.
HAH! Maynard lighting one off is really something. He absolutely crushes it live. Dude is amazing.
Very keen to hear your take on some more early years stuff from Tool. Despite the decades of maturation and metamorphosis, Undertow sounds as fresh, raw, and real as it did in the early 90s. Flood, Undertow, 4°, Swamp Song, you name it, it all sounds SHARP.
This is the song, man. This is the one that gateway'd so many of us into the world of Tool. This is the song that was blaring on high school car radios into school at 6:30 in the morning. This is the song that during my first, second and third Tool concerts I lost my voice to. There are so many in the catalog I love. Some even more. But in the end there will always be, The Grudge. 🤘
This song perfectly flows with the lyrics: the whole process of exercising a grudge. I believe that scream at the end was Maynard vocalizing the anxiety and rage and release of letting go. Although, I had always wondered if that scream was “doctored” about halfway through until I saw a video of him doing it live.
Oh my goodness, you did it! I squeaked when I got this notification. :D I know the Tool army will dominate the comments but I appreciate you keeping at this, and hope that one of these days you might get to check out Disillusion's Back To Times of Splendour. ;) I can be patient.
The opening track of this album is one of the best metal/prog metal/music piece ever!
As a fellow bass goober I've been waiting on this one! Thanks for all your vids!
Letting go is sometimes the hardest thing to do in life. Moving on is hard whether we are facing a death or holding a grudge. Both circumstances take an emotional toll, but they can be amplified by an unwillingness to let the past rest. Perhaps the hardest part about situations like these is that the longer we hold on to the past, the stronger its grip is on our lives. The Grudge, by Tool, is the first song from their album, Lateralus. Simply defined, a grudge is a “feeling of deep-seated resentment or ill will”. A grudge is more than a surface unwillingness; a grudge takes on a personality, it grows in strength, and it eventually controls our life. Destruction is the only outcome for someone who cannot escape the deadly grip of a grudge - he has to let go.
In the first line, Maynard James Keenan, Tool’s lead singer, describes the grudge as a “crown of negativity”. Crowns are usually seen as something glorious, brilliant, and beautiful; Keenan takes this symbol of power and authority and twists it into something dark and terrifying, but the idea of power is retained. He is almost saying we are imbued with some sort of negative power when we allow this grudge to define us. He goes on to say, “Calculate what we will or will not tolerate/ Desperate to control all and everything”. With this false sense of power created by a grudge, the person becomes filled with a sense of being able to control everything around them. Typically, with the presence of a grudge comes a plan for revenge. A person wearing this crown of negativity is oftentimes so blinded by it they are unable see the limits of their power.
I believe the next line, “Unable to forgive your scarlet lettermen,” is an allusion to Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter. The antagonist in this book, Roger Chillingworth, is seeking revenge on his ex-wife. He believes that she has committed an act of adultery against him. His quest for revenge consumes him so much that it affects his external appearance. His ex-wife’s lover, Arthur Dimmesdale, dies before Chillingworth is able to exact his revenge. Chillingworth soon follows him. His life had become so intertwined with his grudge that they were interdependent. When the source of power, the target, of his grudge was gone, the life drained out of him. He died with nothing. Just like Keenan said in his song, “Clutch it like a cornerstone/otherwise it all comes down/justify denials and grip it to the lonesome end”. A cornerstone is the source of stability for any building. It needs to be solid and immovable. Similarly, a grudge provides stability for a person’s life, no matter how false that stability is. Friends around us may point out how silly we are, but the holder is blinded by power. Part of us is, “terrified of being wrong,” as Keenan says. In the eyes of the holder, if he is found to be wrong, he will be put in an ”ultimatum prison cell”.
If the song ended here, we would be without hope - locked away in a prison cell, left to our own devices. But Keenan tells us, “Saturn ascends/choose one or ten/hang on or be humbled again”. The reference to Saturn ascending is an astrological idea of changes in life associated with the completion of a revolution by Saturn around the earth. At this time in life, a choice has to be made. When he says “one or ten,” I believe he uses this to express to polar opposites. There is no middle ground; either the grudge is given up or held on to for another period of life. The one glimmer of hope here is the presence of a choice. Despite all of the power the grudge has, we can still choose to cast it away.
Even though Keenan provides a way for escape, he does not want us to become complacent; he reminds us of the only outcome if we choose to hang on to the grudge. If we are “wear[ing] the grudge like a crown/desperate to control/unable to forgive,” then we will be “sinking deeper”. This begs the question, deeper into what? I believe when a grudge comes to be, it is born out of reason. We were wronged in some way, but as a grudge lingers in our mind it begins to create a false reality. The truth we see with our eyes becomes distorted when it passes through the filter of the grudge. The grudge becomes “defining, confining, [and] controlling”. Our real self is buried away within our subconscious; seemingly powerless to regain control. So we continue downward.
Then “Saturn comes back around to show you everything”. Now is the time to make a choice. This stanza is the first time in the song that Keenan refers to the grudge as a stone. He says, “[the grudge] drags you down like a stone”. The other option is to be treated like “a child, light and innocent”. The process of separating ourselves from the grudge is not easy. We have to completely humble ourselves to the level of a child. He is saying there must be a return to innocence; all of the unnecessary weight in life must be eradicated. All the “[calculations of] what we will or will not tolerate,” and the “[desperations] to control all and everything,” serve only to complicate and fill our life with meaningless pursuits that waste any chance we have of living. We must be like a child because only a renaissance of innocence will bring freedom from this “cold and fated anchor”.
Finally, Keenan begs us to “give away the stone/let the oceans take and transmutate this cold and fated anchor/give away the stone/let the waters kiss and transmutate these leaden grudges into gold”. His imagery of the oceans and waters is an allusion to baptism. A thorough cleansing is necessary for change, but with change comes reward. If this trial in life is endured, then “these leaden grudges will be turned into gold”. Perseverance breeds greatness.
Keenan breaks down in the end of the song. He lets out a passionate scream - I envision him falling to his knees with his hands on his head. He knows he must let go, has to let go. He begins whispering “[l]et go, let go, let go…,” over and over, almost chanting it. The song crescendos as he chants louder and louder until he is screaming “let go!” He knows where the grudge is taking him; he sees the destruction waiting for him if he cannot let go. Change is never easy, but he has to try.
A grudge begins in reason but transforms into a powerful entity capable of destroying lives. The only way to escape the endless spiral of increasing desperation to control everything around us is to choose to change. No matter how attractive the crown is, we need to take it off. Maynard James Keenan begs us to throw away “this cold and fated anchor,” but no one can make us let go, it must come from within. In the end, it is up to us…it always has been.
Wear THE GRUDGE like a crown!
This song has the best rock guttural scream of all time at the end. Change my mind? You won't.
Anyone else have very un-graceful reactions of excitement upon seeing this was up finally?
The entire ending of this song, from Maynard's 25 second scream, the "let go" groove, and Danny going fucking ballistic is all just so damn good.
I was lucky enough to see TOOL open with that song. And yes Maynard pulled off that 27 second Epic scream flawlessly of course. And if you know TOOL they performed that song exactly like the album .. your look 👀 at the end of that scream was priceless! Keep up the great TOOL reactions ❤️❤️
Geeeeeebz! Good to be back. Haven't watched in a while because I've been stupid busy! Excited for this!
It was only a matter of time!! Thanks for getting to this Geebz, and thanks for continuing doing these.
As always, love what you do, and keep rockin'! Awwright!
"I've only done 15-18 songs" How often can you say that about an artist/ group. A lot of people think they know everything off of a few songs. Gotta love it.
Sonically Danny shines on this album. They absolutely nailed the drum sound down on this one. Very well engineered and produced. Been in absolute love with it since the day it came out (20 years already). Love watching your reactions and your observations are just perfect! Alright!
Oh I’m gonna enjoy this… a pleasure seeing you experience this song for the first time
Love the talk on the rhythm and how it is so deeply entrenched in us, one of my favorite reactions so far, keep up the good work!
One of the reasons Tool will persist long after we're all gone... The pure resonance with our being... And the invited participation with the music 😉
Most people don't realize or even know that Adam started as a bass player which, once you know that, explains a lot of his guitar choices. So, TOOL is 3 percussionists & a vocalist.
Thank you for your dedication and commitment to exploration/discovery of our favorite artists and songs. We all (as TOOL fans) appreciate your unique perspective!
Omg YES. One of me favorites. Got to see this one live too!
Thanks, Geebz!!
This was an important album for many in a lot of ways. This is an amazing opening track for what this album is.
My son was 3 weeks old. 9/11 had just happened. Laying in the dark with my newborn on my chest. It was cathartic.
🤯🤯WOW!! I had no idea how big of a "lead-off" song for the Tool experience this was to so many of the tool army members. Such great moments are being shared in the comments about your "first time" you heard this. LONG LIVE THE SOUNDTRACK OF YOUR LIFE!!!
I was in highschool! I heard schism on radio and checked out more. For me it ended up being the Grudge, the patient and lateralus on repeat.
Then I discovered Aenima album o.O
@@thatreidguy Similar flow for me in terms of what I knew about Tool before I actually listened to them. Schism was on the radio at the time and when I told my Tool fan friends I liked it, they said, "Yeah, it's probably the 4th or 5th best song on the album." I thought they were bullshitting because Schism was amazing.
Schism is still amazing. And they were right. The Grudge is probably my favorite Tool song until the recent album, largely because of the way they move both the tempo and melody around with everyone taking the lead at varying points, Danny included (of course).
To me Lateralus is the greatest album ever made. Just layers upon layers of sounds and meanings.
For those of us who grew up with Tool (the old folks now) Tool was a tool to get through a lot of our angst in the 90’s.
Lots of alchemy and kabbalah in this one. And if you think this sounds primal or tribal, you must also do Triad from this album. You can't not beat your chest.