Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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 ...
During the height of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Bambu released a 7-song album "Sharpest Tool In The Shed." The album finds Bambu continuing his staunch critique of the status quo , as well as giving words of support to his listeners as they work through the pandemic.
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.
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]
Antonoff mentioned that he worked solely on the music of "Sharpest Tool" with Carpenter handling the lyrics. [181] Of Emails I Can't Send , Carpenter said "I would hope that if someone had never listened to my music before, and they listened to this album, they would leave it feeling like they know me better as a person."
"All Star" is a song by the American rock band Smash Mouth from their second studio album, Astro Lounge (1999). Written by Greg Camp and produced by Eric Valentine, the song was released on May 4, 1999, as the first single from Astro Lounge.
"H." is a song by American rock band Tool. The song was released as the second single from their second album, Ænima on March 19, 1997. "H." reached number 23 on the US Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. [2] The working title for the song was "Half Empty", and thus "H." most likely stands for that or "Half Full". [3]
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 ...