Los Angeles Times

Tool hits back hard after long absence

- By Randall Roberts

Tool ‘Fear Inoculum’ (Volcano/Sony)

On Wednesday, fans of the prog-metal band Tool awoke to the band’s first new song in 13 years. To say devotees were giddy is an understate­ment: “We have been through Hell and back in our lives,” one commenter wrote on Vevo. “Some of us in abusive relationsh­ips, some of us overseas in combat, some of us doing the daily grind. But we survived. We are here. We made it. And together we can all cherish this new, beautiful music.” Stretching across 10 minutes, “Fear Inoculum” finds singer and lyricist Maynard James Keenan focused on what he calls in one verse “my allegorica­l elegy.” Featuring a character called “the Deceiver” and a narrator fixated on ideas of contagion, lies, immunity and “venom in mania,” the words are carried by a mesmerizin­g, time-signature-jumping combinatio­n of contrabass, bells, synthetic dots, choppy distorted guitars and a conga-driven rhythm. When the band locks into its groove, the music moves with a propulsion that at some points suggests German “krautrock” band Can and at others the Melvins’ beefy art metal. The song is the title track to Tool’s fifth album, which comes out Aug. 30.

Yacht ‘(Downtown) Dancing’ (DFA)

For the first track from the forward-thinking Los Angeles duo’s new album, Claire L. Evans and Jona Bechtolt tapped opensource artificial intelligen­ce and machine-learning tools. They did so by using as source material Yacht’s 82-song back catalog. Collaborat­ing with AI experts to create lyrics, music and even the font used in the lyric video, Yacht invited algorithms into the studio for “(Downtown) Dancing,” a jerky post-disco track about pleasure and sound that has at its center Evans’ echoey, computer-bolstered voice. It’s one of 10 tracks produced using these methods, which will be released as the album “Chain Tripping” on Aug. 30.

Quitapenas ‘Tranquilid­ad’ video (Cosmica)

The psychedeli­c new video from the Inland Empire’s best afro-Latin band occurs during what’s described as “a colossal, and historymak­ing, blackout.” We watch as a worker for Inland Empire Electric encounters something supernatur­al, which turns out to be an adorable, rainbow-colored furry creature. What follows is an “E.T.”-suggestive story about kids, the cops and an alien. Set in what video director Andrew Vas-quez calls “The Tatooine of Riverside,” the video for “Tranquilid­ad” is scored by a song that, according to release notes, “pays respects to the environmen­t and draws inspiratio­n from Funana music of Cabo Verde as well as Puerto Rican Bomba.” The song is taken from Quitapenas’ new album “Tigrada,” released Friday.

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