When Tool released their debut full-length album,
Undertow, on April 6, 1993, via the label Zoo Entertainment, the band members weren’t exactly the same dudes who are currently putting together their long-awaited fifth album. Back then, they were a little more prolific in their musical output. The members wrote much of
Undertow at the same time as they were hashing out songs for their 1992 debut EP
Opiate. But instead of making an effort to include them on the bludgeoning EP, which featured four studio recordings and two live tracks, Tool kept them in a state of incubation and returned to them when they entered the studio with Sylvia Massy to record their first full album.
When Tool released their debut full-length album,
Undertow, on April 6, 1993, via the label Zoo Entertainment, the band members weren’t exactly the same dudes who are currently putting together their long-awaited fifth album. Back then, they were a little more prolific in their musical output. The members wrote much of
Undertow at the same time as they were hashing out songs for their 1992 debut EP
Opiate. But instead of making an effort to include them on the bludgeoning EP, which featured four studio recordings and two live tracks, Tool kept them in a state of incubation and returned to them when they entered the studio with Sylvia Massy to record their first full album.
28 Years Ago: Tool Pull Fans Into Their Undertow classicrock1051.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from classicrock1051.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
× By Michael Rietmulder, The Seattle Times
Published: February 28, 2021, 6:00am
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2 Photos Seattle rockers Ayron Jones, left, and Eva Walker of The Black Tones, shown here at Jimi Hendrix Park in Seattle last year, both have support from Seattle musical heavy hitters. (Steve Ringman/Seattle Times/TNS) Photo Gallery
SEATTLE It was a one-in, one-out situation at the Capitol Hill Elysian Brewing. The capacity crowd packed into the cozy brewpub to revel in two complementary things Seattle has always done well craft beer and loud guitars.
Thunderpussy was yet to release its debut album, but had already achieved local buzz band status when Elysian tapped the ’70s rock revivalists to help christen a charitable new brew in 2017. In typical Thunderpussy fashion, frontwoman Molly Sides commanded the makeshift stage like a limber rock ‘n’ roll contortionist, howling over Whitney Petty’s revving guitars that seemed loud enough to blow the nearby
SEATTLE — It was a one-in, one-out situation at the Capitol Hill Elysian Brewing. The capacity crowd packed into the cozy brewpub to revel in two complementary things Seattle has