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Esquire praised the song for fitting in the best aspects of every single one of Tool's prior studio albums, and felt the song alone made the 13 year wait for the album worth it. [8] Loudwire deemed the song "the greatest achievement of guitarist Adam Jones' entire career. [4] In 2020, the song won the Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance ...
Dictionary.com meanwhile says it is "used as a nonsense word by children to express approval or to represent the longest word in English." [ 10 ] The word contains 34 letters and 14 syllables. Legal action
"Stinkfist", also referred to as Track #1 due to the perceived offensiveness of the actual title, [3] is a song by American rock band Tool. It is their first industry single and first music video release from their second major label album Ænima .
"Opiate" is a song by American rock band Tool and the title track from their debut EP recorded by producer Sylvia Massy at Sound City Studios in 1991. "Opiate" serves as the final track of the Opiate EP and contains the hidden track, "The Gaping Lotus Experience".
"Hooker with a Penis" is a song by American rock band Tool.It was released on September 17, 1996, as the seventh track of their second studio album, Ænima.The song is the shortest non-segue track on the album and one of its heaviest; lyrically, it is uncharacteristically straightforward, in contrast to the band's more progressive works.
Tool performing live in 2006. Tool is an American progressive rock band from Los Angeles, California. Formed in 1990, the band originally featured vocalist Maynard James Keenan, guitarist Adam Jones, bassist Paul D'Amour and drummer Danny Carey, although D'Amour was replaced by Justin Chancellor in 1995. [1]
Everything that all nature, all these things we’re talking about, it’s already here. By pointing it out like, staring at it, pointing at it with those numbers present, and the way that the numbers and the lyrics are, I feel like, you know, it's good to let people know about it, but I almost feel like it was kind of a dick joke, in a way. It ...
The lyrics protest Tipper Gore and censorship, which is a recurring theme in Tool songs. [1] [2] [3] The song was first recorded on a self-titled demo tape variously known as Toolshed and 72826, recorded in mid-1991. This demo version is not the same as the studio recording that appears on Opiate.