Sonntag, 1. September 2019

Tool - Fear Inoculum (2019)



Yay! Finally a review of a current album! Something I wasn't sure if it would ever happen, and featuring an album by Tool. Something I wasn't sure if that would ever happen either - but here we are!

I always had a rather distant relationship to Tool. Most of their songs are a bit too 'cerebral' for my taste, with their machine-like precision, polished sounds and complex rhythms. I usually prefer dirt and spontaneity instead of too much perfection.

Well good news, if you are like me then: Fear Inoculum feels definitely more dirty than its predecessors, which I find helps a lot getting access to their music. At times they did remind me actually quite a bit of Baroness or Mastodon. This said. Tool of course stays Tool, and sounds like Tool. The band also hasn't dropped any of their complexity or darkness. The production just feels a bit less cold and more dynamic this time around.

The songs are, with the exception of a handful 'breather'-tracks, all above ten minutes. Quite naturally this means the album doesn't unfolds easily. To the contrary: it is full of buildups, mood- and tempo changes and a lot of dynamic - definitely an album that wants to be discovered. I had it running almost constantly over the weekend and I can't honestly say that it hasn't revealed everything yet. It probably takes a longer time-span of repeated careful listening to get behind it - and that's great!

For somebody like me, who isn't their greatest fan, I am quite surprised that Fear Inoculum has actually quite a lot to offer. It isn't the typical stuff I'm listening to, but I find the album very appealing and quite - hypnotic. It shows great skill without being lost in virtuosity while at the same time has this atmosphere of an H.R. Giger painting: A surreal biomechanical landscape you cannot help but explore.