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Allure of Tool mystifies, opens eyes, satisfies

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Allure of Tool mystifies, opens eyes, satisfies

Virtually everything about Tool suggests how not to have a successful career: taking 13 years between albums. Stationing its singer at the back of the stage throughout performances. Video imagery of human/alien hybrids and insects accompanied by lyrics often left open to interpretation, which can be risky when dealing with socially conscious issues and the state of the world. Not to mention, in this day and age, mostly forbidding your fans from capturing memories with their hand-held devices.

Not only does Tool have more than a knack for making it all work. But the spell by which the Los Angeles band binds its audience is more than welcome by the masses, which included last Friday’s sold-out 19,000-plus throng at the AT&T Center.

With veteran English supporters Killing Joke in tow, Tool returned to town on the strength of Aug. 30 release Fear Inoculum, its first album since 2006 and fifth overall spanning a 29-year career (see 48-photo slideshow below).

And things would be much different than most gigs before the first note was even played.

Patrons were advised a “no-camera” policy would be in full effect and violators would be expelled from the venue with no refund. Surprisingly, most everyone conformed, Refreshingly, when was the last time you attended a concert without someone blocking your view with their phone raised high — your childhood? Sadly, it had to be specially requested by the artist in the first place. Happily, the fans’ acceptance netted a reward at show’s end (more on that later).

And with that, a chime-like curtain with threaded openings surrounded the stage as drummer Danny Carey took his spot behind the kit sporting a Spurs uniform. The loud seal of approval came with fans not knowing, or caring, that an AT&T Center staff member had been summoned to grab a uniform from the gift shop, or that Carey has demonstrated the same fan-friendly gesture in other NBA cities on the tour. Moments later, guitarist Adam Jones and bassist Justin Chancellor began the first strums of the nearly 10 1/2-minute “Fear Inoculum.”

A spike Mohawked, leather jacket and plaid pants wearing vocalist Maynard James Keenan soon joined the fray, completing the band’s heavily regarded quartet as the arena erupted. Following the new title track, Keenan simply stated, “Texas,” and the crowd answered. Keenan followed up with, “That sounded more like Oklahoma. . . Texas!” The simplicity in crowd management combined with the complexity of his music captivated an audience glad to be swept under the hypnotic trance of the singer who also fronts A Perfect Circle and side project Puscifer.

Mixing in other new lengthy tracks “Pneuma” and “Invincible” with crowd favorites “Aenema,” “Schism” and “Intolerance,” Tool didn’t take nearly as long as the duration of its songs to cement its welcomed return to San Antonio. While Carey, Jones and Chancellor expertly kept things flowing with mesmerizing instrumental stretches during most tunes, Keenan would spend three or four songs at a time on one side of the stage across from Carey’s kit before making a slow, methodical walk to the other mic to benefit that side of the arena. The only time Keenan stepped down to the forefront was to playfully take a back-and-forth joyride on one of the equipment cases.

The big screen lit up the arena with Tool’s patented yet often impossible to explain video visuals, which properly served as a backdrop to the musicians more than as a distraction. A little more than two-thirds of the way through the show, rather than halfway, Tool went on a 12-minute intermission, communicated simply by way of a large countdown clock rather than by Keenan. Afterwards, Carey emerged in his Spurs uniform and banged a gong while embarking on his new instrumental “Chocolate Chip Trip.”

That paved the way for another new tune, “Invincible,” which left the standing crowd in anticipation of how the night would end. Keenan chose that moment to speak for only the second time of the two-hour, seven-minute performance: “Always a pleasure, Texas. Because you’ve been very good, you may now take out your phones. Check your email, Twitter, take photos. You kids and your phones.”

And with that, Tool unleashed classic “Stinkfist,” the AT&T Center lighting up in phone cameras and onlookers enraptured by the musical and visual exhibition. Again, the crowd roared as Tool’s members concluded their spectacle. Keenan matter-of-factly waved and departed by himself, but not before giving his bassist a slap on his rump.

As Chancellor,Jones and Carey tossed out picks and sticks, no one cared that Tool omitted its two biggest hits “Sober” and “Prison Sex,” or arguably the best song on the new album “7empest.” No one seemed to mind the test of how long they could go without using their phones. Instead, a crowd that was larger than even Iron Maiden’s “Legacy of the Beast” tour at the same venue exactly one month earlier could all agree: when it comes to Tool and its mystifying methods, the pieces fit.

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River City puts the rock and fest in annual extravaganza with '90s flair

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River City puts the rock and fest in annual extravaganza with '90s flair

A day that began with a 70 percent chance of rain to the flooding extreme morphed into a 100 percent extravaganza of metal, food, beer, fun and nary a drop from the skies last Saturday. Nothing, evidently, was going to rain on the sixth annual River City Rockfest's parade.

Heavy on a roster of bands that flourished in the '90s -- something even Primus singer and bassist extraordinaire Les Claypool pointed out -- and heavy on the, well, heaviness, the festival treated more than 25,000 fans to a full day of partying headlined by Nine Inch Nails. Set up for the first time jointly in the parking lots of the Freeman Coliseum and a portion of the AT&T Center, with the Bud Light Courtyard serving as the halfway point, three distant stages provided a variety of metal talent and a field day for those who enjoy monitoring pedometers.

Stone Temple Pilots headlined the second stage with new singer Jeff Gutt, a virtual carbon copy of the late original frontman Scott Weiland in terms of look, mannerisms and sound. Which is to say STP is back in ‘90s form.

Living Colour came out of the Shade, the title of its new album, with original members Corey Glover on vocals, guitarist Vernon Reid and drummer Will Calhoun joined by birthday-boy bassist Doug Wimbish on a few new tracks and classic favorites "Type" and of course 99.5-KISS FM tune-on-repeat "Cult of Personality." They even covered The Clash's "Should I Stay or Should I Go," which can be found on the deluxe version of their debut Vivid, which is commemorating 30 years.

The Rockfest also brought out the "cycos" known as Suicidal Tendencies. Playing what was considered the third and smallest stage but which was lined up in the middle of the lots, original vocalist Mike Muir was so gung-ho on starting with his trademark, "What the hell is going on around here" on "You Can't Bring Me Down," but moisture on stage begged to differ as he slipped and fell on his keister. No worse for the wear, Muir picked himself up and got the set smashing with former Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo and hometown guitarist Dean Pleasants, a graduate of Sam Houston High School.

Chevelle, Bush and Clutch joined locals The Heroine, Lynnwood King & The Revival, Covina and Upon A Burning Body as well as All That Remains, which was added to the fest's lineup after Hellyeah bowed out following the death of drummer and former Pantera mainstay Vinnie Paul. The Heroine, fronted by King, and his jazz choir spinoff The Revival are the only bands local or national to play all six Rockfests. Covina, meanwhile, kicked off the day on the third stage with a noon set of San Antonio metalcore aided by friend and vocalist Paul Freedman of A House Divided.

Upon A Burning Body, as they did at the three-day, 55-band Knotfest in 2014 in San Bernardino, California (coverage here), incited the largest pits. Having played the second stage in 2015, the hometown national band received its first Rockfest main-stage opportunity and didn't disappoint with a 1:30 p.m. set. Vocalist Danny Leal donned a David Robinson Spurs jersey, and the party was on with opener “Red Razor Wrists" and “Texas Blood Money,” with its "Deep in the Heart of Texas" intro.

Bush and Stone Temple Pilots kept up the ‘90s vibe with frontmen Gavin Rossdale and Gutt, respectively, jumping off the stage and singing among the crowd. Primus won the unofficial award for Most Weird Vibe not only with its unique brand of rock that showcases Claypool’s ridiculous skill on the low end, but also the unpredictable event of body surfers making their presence felt on “Too Many Puppies” and “Mr. Krinkle.” Nine Inch Nails ended the joyous occasion with “Mr. Self-Destruct” himself, Trent Reznor, and Co. tearing through “Closer” and encores “The Hand That Feeds” and “Head Like a Hole” as part of a 90-minute set.

It's impossible to photograph every band at a festival such as the River City Rockfest, even when you're there from first note to last. Some bands’ set times overlap, the walks from one end-stage to the other can grow arduous, and there’s simply plenty of booths and games the fest has to offer that need to be enjoyed while the music is cranking. With enough food trucks, "Beer Beverage" and liquor tents and merch stands to fulfill a three-day fest let alone the one-day Rockfest, AEG's foray into the River City was done right in terms of setup, organization and opportunities for fun. Even if the musical roster was not as solid as previous years headlined by Guns N' Roses, Linkin Park, Disturbed and Def Leppard.

For the 2018 version, arguably the roster's most intriguing artist, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, did not permit media photography. Jett must not have been feeling photogenic on her 60th birthday even though she was plastered on the huge stage screens throughout "Bad Reputation," “Cherry Bomb,” "I Love Rock N' Roll" and "I Hate Myself For Loving You." Stone Temple Pilots, meanwhile, was the lone artist mandating artist approval of all photographs prior to publishing but had not acknowledged Alamo True Metal's submissions six days ago as of press time. And unlike prior Rockfests, no media video footage was allowed.

So with that said, feel free to peruse the 232-photo slideshow now and when you begin coming down with a case of Rockfest withdrawals. Until next year, keep Rockfest-ing.

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