Expectations were high Monday night in San Antonio for the long-awaited return of Tool, who canceled two previous gigs due to a band injury and illness. My anticipation for the performance stretched back more than a year to the quartets warm-up gig at SMUs McFarlin Auditorium, which a former collegiate associate of mine failed to acquire tickets for.
The rules for the evening were displayed like tombstones every 20 yards in the quarter mile stretch from the parking lot to the AT&T Center: No moshing. No crowd surfing. No cameras or recording devices. No matter.
The Sonic Youth-inspired instrumental noise from openers, Seattles Kinski, might as well have been elevator music. We wanted Tool. With the intermission music and the house lights on, Maynard James Keenan and company appeared nonchalantly on the stage. The normally cryptic lead singer, dressed like an urban outfitter with cowboy boots, a belt buckle, and cowboy hat atop his mohawk, addressed the apprehensive audience: San Antonio, I swear you people have the worst luck. Im not sure how to put this Ive got good news and Ive got bad news. The good news is there is no bad news.
Of course, he was lying.
Ive long believed that Tool is the Pink Floyd of my generation, a mainstream, yet innovative faction focused on creating an abstract and meaningful experience, whose individual musical pieces cannot be separated from their conceptual whole. But somewhere in the five-year span between 2001s Lateralus and last years 10,000 Days, which includes A Perfect Circles disastrous Emotive, Tool lost a bit of its multidimensional and cryptic vision, began to cover it with more grandiose production, and hoped no one would call bullshit. The subtle change surfaced Monday night during the bands weak and short-lived set. (Houston received a two-song encore the previous night.)
The stage set-up looked like the Great Seal, a pyramid with guitarist Adam Jones and bassist Justin Chancellor forming a solid base, Keenan and drummer Danny Carey resting one level above, and a series of screens providing the Third Eye. They opened with Jambi, one of the hardest hitting new numbers, before Jones sustained guitar gave way to Aenimas Stinkfist and Forty Six & 2. From afar, the quartet appeared meditative and precise, carefully crafting their pounding prog-rhythms. From the fifth row of the seated pit section, the scene was something else entirely. There was no mystery or mystique, the bottom tier looked bored during the earthly trance induced by Lost Keys (Blame Hofmann), Rosetta Stoned, and Intension, while Keenans vocals were barely audible.
Then came a 10-minute pause, during which the band primarily sat on stage while men in white lab coats readied the impending laser supplement. The green beams proved to be a potent opiate, effortlessly engaging the stares of attendees during another tiring trifecta (“Right In Two, “Wings for Maria (Pt. 1), and “10,000 Days (Wings Pt. 2)”). The effect was too purposeful, following unimpressive and overwrought experimental excursions that paled in comparison to Boris SXSW showcase or Kinskis work for that matter.
King Crimsons Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto nearly saved the night with their appearance and subsequent jam during the evenings closer, Lateralus, but by that point the audience was starving for something from 1993s opus Undertow (Sober, Prison Sex) or at least the better suites from 10,000 Days (The Pot, Vicarious). Instead, it appeared as though Tool had become a mere capitalist machine, the very thing it once rallied against.
This article appears in May 18 • 2007.
