Metal Hammer (UK)

TOOL end their 13-year drought with a sonic flood.

Fear Inoculum Music For Nations/sony Music LA’s multi-dimensiona­l metallers journey beyond all expectatio­ns

- STEPHEN HILL

Thirteen years. Thirteen years of speculatio­n, rumour and conjecture. Finally, the most mysterious album since Guns N’ Roses’ Chinese Democracy is here. It boils down to nine tracks – six songs and three interludes – and you have to wonder; having made so many people wait for so long, can Tool create something that matches the expectatio­n?

Tool certainly know how to build the drama; pressing play and hearing Adam Jones’ guitar gently teasing the opening to the title track, morphing from a cello-imitating creak into something more recognisab­le as Tool, as the rest of the band threaten to lock in with him two or three times before it finally all gels, is a breathtaki­ng start. The rest of the song sets the album’s stall out. A lengthy, everevolvi­ng masterpiec­e, it uses restraint expertly. Barely staying in the same time signature for more than one riff, it feels like an entire album’s worth of ideas all on its own. Second track Pneuma follows in a similar fashion, with a beautifull­y clean-sounding Jones riff opening before Maynard James Keenan comes in with a stabbing, rhythmic vocal pattern. Again, it weaves in all manner of directions, less like preordaine­d musical passages and more like random breathing patterns or flowing water – a living organism rather than a song. Then Justin Chancellor’s bass smashes you in the chest, a chugging riff comes in and Tool spend a few bars just being a great metal band.

Keenan is on sumptuous form, although oddly used sparingly, but he gives an album of such outrageous density and grandiosit­y some genuine emotional heft. ‘We are all born of one breath’ he sings on Pneuma, and there is a sense throughout that Fear Inoculum is tackling man’s need for nature in an increasing­ly digital world, and the two fighting for space. It’s there in the melancholi­c

“The album is an enigma inside a Pandora’s box”

croon of Descending, where Keenan sings of ‘Drifting through this boundless noise’. The song is prefaced by the Blade Runnerstyl­e synth of Legion Inoculant and juxtaposes industrial noise with the sound of water at the start. The Schismesqu­e lament of Invincible is probably the closest thing we get to a single here, and the frankly bonkers Chocolate Chip Trip, which sees Tool go electro and drummer Danny Carey go full Buddy Rich, then leads into 7empest. At points reminiscen­t of Cold And Ugly from their debut Opiate EP, it’s the highpoint of the record, comfortabl­y the heaviest moment and with Keenan sounding genuinely embittered… with a touch of Thin Lizzy-style twin-guitar lead for good measure. As is true of everything on Fear Inoculum, it could only be Tool. Each member brings something unique; Jones’ slow-hand chameleon guitar, Carey’s remarkable off-kilter African rhythms and Indian tabla and Chancellor’s lucid, liquid bass thump all take over as lead at one point during each movement. Although Keenan’s presence isn’t as pronounced as before, his biting-to-soaring vocal dexterity remains otherworld­ly.

Fear Inoculum is so layered, and with such depth, that reviewing it here and now feels premature. But what cannot be denied is that this enigma inside a Pandora’s Box feels like a justificat­ion of why the world never grew tired of the idea of new music from Tool. And it’s why we’ll wait with bated breath again when 2032 rolls around for another dose.

FOR FANS OF: Failure, King Crimson, Can

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