Opiate (Remastered) TOOL
Album info
Album-Release:
1992
HRA-Release:
05.08.2019
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Sweat 03:47
- 2 Hush 02:48
- 3 Part Of Me 03:17
- 4 Cold And Ugly (Live) 04:10
- 5 Jerk-Off (Live) 04:22
- 6 Opiate 05:22
Info for Opiate (Remastered)
As the title of Tool's 1992 debut implies, they're none too impressed by religion, though other targets--fear ("Cold and Ugly"), hypocritical moralizing ("Jerk-Off"), nonconformity ("Hush")--get their time in the spotlight as well. Opiate is a collection of heavy, aggressive, cynical music (though the tail end of the title track sounds more like acid rock), packaged in songs noticeably shorter than on their later efforts (Undertow, 1993, and Aenima, 1996). While not as impressive as Undertow, arguably their finest effort, Opiate has a definite appeal.
"In retrospect, Opiate seems a little haphazard, but it's possible to hear the seeds of Tool's oppressively bleak, cerebral metal in such cuts as "Sweat" and "Opiate." The two live tracks, "Cold and Ugly" and "Jerk-Off," don't sound out of place, since they share the same churning riffs, black noise, and doom that characterize Tool's sound. This is not as developed as either Undertow or Ænima, but it's possible to hear the roots of those albums all over this EP." (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG)
Maynard James Keenan, vocals
Adam Jones, guitar
Paul D'Amour, bass
Danny Carey, drums
Digitally remastered
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