The Real Meaning of Tool's Lateralus AlbumMusic 

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A very interesting read for all you Tool fanatics out there. I found this while I was trying to find the meaning to Schism.

TO ANYONE WHO THINKS TOOL SUCKS: READ THIS POST ON A WEBSITE I FOUND, AND FIND OUT WHY THEY ARE INCREDIBLE Okay - I'm a first time poster, but there are some things that I really want to throw around. To me, Tool's Lateralus is the most amazing piece of music ever composed. Not because I'm a goofball that has an affinity for the rockin' hard metal, and not because I want to latch on to their (in my opinion, unfairly applied) satanic reputation, but because I can say that it is the most intellectual, inspirational, and awe-inspiring material that I have ever been exposed to. Many reviews and commentaries of Lateralus on the internet mention that it was long-awaited, often saying that it eased Tool fans' desire for more. I think it was much more than that. I think Tool deliberately wanted to give their fans something truly amazing, but wanted them to find it on their own. "Recognize this as a holy gift..." At first, I thought that the song Lateralus was about tripping acid - discovering true color by seperating the body from the mind. At first listen, I imagined the bending envelope as an intense visual. After becoming more familiar with the track, however, I had reformed my interpretation to something broader: think deeper. Lateralus, perhaps because it is the album's "title track", serves as the central clue for a puzzle that a friend of mine had read about somewhere on the internet.

"All I know is that there is a different order for the songs - something about two spirals. Oh yeah, and thirteen is in the middle." After scavenging through endless google search results, I gave up on finding more about this 'alternate order'. Intent to figure the album out, and very curious about the spirals - I put on the proverbial 'thinking cap'. I understood how the spirals could have a lot of significance, in that the album's title track offers the inspiring, "swing on the spiral of our divinity and still be a human..........And following our will and wind we may just go where no one's been. We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no one's been." In my internet scavenging, I had read one review, written by a drummer, who mentioned that Danny Carey's drum beat formed a fibonacci sequence during the song Lateralus. A drummer myself, I decided to get out the graph paper and follow Danny. I can't play like he can, but at least I can hear everything he's doing, and thus was able to construct the drum tabulature. Sure enough, Danny repeats a Fibonacci sequence through the number 13: 1,1,2,3,5,8,13. After 13, he starts again with 1. Bringing in my Algebra 2 knowledge of the Fibonacci sequence, when the equation for the Fibonacci sequence (which I don't actually know) is graphed, it forms a sprial whose vertex depends on the number at which the sequence begins. Coincidence? I began to think not. I had already known of Danny's obsession with sacred geometry and am familiar with Bob Frissell's book, Nothing in This Book Is True, But It's Exactly How Things Are , so the significance of what I had stumbled upon had actually begun to settle in.

This is where I just had to play with Lateralus. I had doodled a few spirals in the corners of my graph paper, and in doing so made the first important connection to Lateralus. I knew that if the tracks were in fact intended to be heard in a different order, "Parabol" and "Parabola" would have to go together. In drawing my spirals, I had begun with a vertex and 'spiraled' outwards. After writing the numbers 1 through 13 linearly, I could immediately see that Parabol and Parabola would have to be the middle of my spiral (in that 13 / 2 = 6.5). I drew a simple arrow between 6 and 7 and then pondered the next pair. At first, I actually drew a spiral connecting pairs of numbers whose sum equaled 13 (the number of songs on the album). This, however, left the last track in the same position and without anything to connect to. At this time, I had used my copy of Lateralus and Cool Edit Pro to take out the silences between tracks and put the songs in the following order: 6,7,5,8,4,9,3,10,2,11,1,12,13. The transition from Parabola into Schism blew my mind, as the plucks, probably dismissed by listeners as a drawn out rant of an ending, perfectly transition into the beginning of Schism. When you count out beats as the strings are plucked, Schism resumes with the same time signature and tempo - mirroring the progression of notes. The transition from Schism into Ticks & Leeches is equally intriguing. Schism ends with strong double-kick bass and tom smacks, and Ticks & Leeches begins with what many would call a 'tribal' drum beat. The beat at the very start of Ticks & Leeches is slightly different every subsequent time it is repeated - the measures are two beats longer. Yup - you guessed it - those two beats are ACTUALLY the last two beats of Schism.

I can honestly say that I never understood the album's fourth track, Mantra until reordering the album's songs. What I had originally heard as whale calls now had begun to resemble the worst imaginable dry heaves - or a stylized choking. Fitting, seeing as how the last line in Ticks & Leeches is "I hope you choke." After this transition, none of those following it really seemed to make much sense. I certainly didn't like that Disposition and Reflection had been seperated - as they sound quite good when played sequentially on the album. This was the only real roadblock in my disciphering of the Holy Gift. Then I had remembered what my friend had told me - 13 was in the middle. At the time, probably just wanting to believe that there was more to this cd, I had equated this to the positioning of the song "Intermission" on the previous release, Ænema. For the song to be in the 'middle' of the album it would have to be the seventh track in sequence, here having six tracks on either side of it. So I inserted Faaip de Oiad after Lateralus, and almost peed my pants when I discovered that (ever-so-faintly) the fading tone of the last note of Lateralus could be heard in beginning of Faaip de Oiad, and how the distortion of the guitars at the tail end of Lateralus resembled, and later transitioned seamlessly into, the static at the beginning of Faaip de Oiad. The lyrics of Lateralus justify this break in the spiral, almost instructing: "spiral out, keep going, spiral out, keep going." I went back to Lateralus to find the next clue. In Danny Carey's amazingly competent Fibonacci sequence, he had stopped at 13 and gone back to 1. This is what I chose to do to finish the sequence. A second spiral was now constucted, and the order for the Holy Gift now became 6,7,5,8,4,9,13,1,12,2,11,3,10. Already many of you are probably fascinated at what I have revealed to you, but I can not even begin to tell you what this new order has opened up for me. The beauty of Lateralus is very, very fragile and has to be viewed with a very open mind. It can also be different when looked at from different points of view. Aside from the fact that the new order of the songs places them in an order where they flow together nicely - often ending and resuming on the same notes or within the same progression, and some times - in the case of Lateralus into Faaip de Oiad and The Grudge into Triad - even overlapping (though admittadly sound much better when actually electronically overlapped, this is kind of cheating. Consider this a hint, however, if you plan on doing this yourself), the two spirals help to tell a story that every Tool fan should hear. In the interest of not boring the only casually intrigued, I will try to keep this very brief. I would also recommend familiarizing yourselves with Frissell's book (yeah - the one I mentioned earlier). I consider Parabol and Parabola to be quite expository. Maynard wants us to know that no matter what happens, we must all know that this is not our only existance. Our very minds and the contents of our subconscious are intended to be immortal, and if we accept this into our lives (be it because of personal or religious reasons), it will be so.

As such, pain is an illusion. At first, I called it "The Lateralus Prophecy" (for reasons you will soon understand), but I have since decided to call the 'reordered' version of Lateralus "The Holy Gift". As Maynard says, "Recognize this as a holy gift and celebrate this chance to be alive and breathing," I take the word "this" to mean much more than just his simple cautioning. Since Parabola is the second track of the Holy Gift, it can be considered at the beginning (esp. considering the context of it's duality with Parabol), and as such, I interpret Maynard's words as more than just clever lyrics in a song. They are a plead for his listeners to listen to everything he has to say and truly celebrate the chance of immortality offered throughout. I would be lying if I said that each song has a specific translation. On the contrary, Tool's music is designed to make you think, not say something specific. It must be treated like great literature - much is hidden contextually. I will elude to Geometric-Drumming's previous post, where he explains the time signatures of Schism: "It represents the title...it's arranged in 12/8 time which is SPLIT into 5/8 and 7/8 - which only really FITS as you PUT THE PIECES BACK TOGETHER." Where Geometric-Drumming claims Schism as his favorite Tool song, I have heard some fans say that it was a retched pick for the album's only single - but I think it was brilliant. Not to downplay the interpretations of those who have posted before me (in fact, I agree with much of what %BlueSoulRobot% has to say), but I think that to the casual listener who knows nothing of Tool, it can be a powerful invitation. Think about it - a lot of dingbats with MTV and a radio would walk around with the words "I know the pieces fit" in their heads. I wonder how many of them took the time to put the pieces back together to (re)discover what is trying to be communicated. I welcome any feedback. I would love to share interpretations of the songs via email - just too lengthy to post here. I would like to offer the following advice: DO NOT use MP3s to digitally reorder Lateralus. A lot of VERY IMPORTANT information is encoded on the actual cd. Ever notice how everyone who has lost or broken that cd has IMMEDIATELY gone out and bought a new copy? I know I have. It's because there are things encoded on the factory pressing of the cd that are lost in the mp3 compression process and any direct copy onto a cd-r. If you want to do it, do it right - I can't stress how important this is. Use the cda tracks as you put it together and maintain all audio fidelity using professional mixing software (sic)

- From this place
 
so does this mean you can only do it with the actual cd and not any burned/dl copy's of it? cause i would like to try this
 
Originally posted by gt4
so does this mean you can only do it with the actual cd and not any burned/dl copy's of it? cause i would like to try this
Well, if you burned the original, you should be right. As for downloaded copies, it may be harder as a lossless rip of a single track is like 40mb.
 
Heh, I've re-listening to it as we speak. Amazing stuff!

[edit] I'm curious about what he thinks is lost in copying the CD. I don't have any pro-quality software available, so I don't know how to rearrange the tracks on my CD. I was going to try the revised track order just using WinAmp, but apparently that's not enough. [/edit]
 
Originally posted by neon_duke
Heh, I've re-listening to it as we speak. Amazing stuff!

[edit] I'm curious about what he thinks is lost in copying the CD. I don't have any pro-quality software available, so I don't know how to rearrange the tracks on my CD. I was going to try the revised track order just using WinAmp, but apparently that's not enough. [/edit]
I think he means rip the CDs to your hardrive (you'd have to rip them as .wav's as not to lose any quality), use a WAV Editor to remove the silences and then play them in the suggested order: 6,7,5,8,4,9,13,1,12,2,11,3,10. You'd probably have to put them in one big file one after another to hear the transitions though...

Originally posted by emad
EAC ripper is the best on the planet...it's the audiophile's choice for good rips.
I use dBpowerAMP with the Ogg Vorbis codec set at 192kbps - which would be probably the equivalent of a 256kbps mp3.
 
iTunes using AAC is also very nice @ that same encoding level. dbpoweramp is also extremely useful - I needed it for TONS of music files because I had many that were in ogg, wma and mp4 - all of which don't work on iPod :(
 
Duke
Heh, I've re-listening to it as we speak. Amazing stuff!

[edit] I'm curious about what he thinks is lost in copying the CD. I don't have any pro-quality software available, so I don't know how to rearrange the tracks on my CD. I was going to try the revised track order just using WinAmp, but apparently that's not enough. [/edit]

Indeed... I didn't realise people were having so much trouble with the meanings to the songs on Lateralis... I actually thought it was one of the more easily deciferable albums from Tool... Of course, when I bought Lateralis, I was already fascinated with the Fibonacci sequence, the golden spiral it produces, and it's arguable tie with the endless string of numbers in the popular Pi sequence... Therefore, when I bought the album, I was ecstatic to hear Maynard speaking of just such things... Beautiful album... Very inspired...

Now, if anyone is interested in these things... Check out the movie "Pi" by Darren Aronofsky (writer/director of Requiem for a Dream)... This film ties in the search for a pattern behind Pi, using the Fibonacci sequence, among other tools, and mysticism, to show the possibilities not everyone is willing to search for, or understand, or accept... If you don't like to use your brain too much (while watching a film, at least), don't watch this film... You will be scratching your head the whole time, and probably get nothing out of it... However, if you want to learn something, and possibly open your mind a bit, check it out... At least, it may help some of you understand some of the meaning behind Maynards words...

Just to open up some conversation...

Tool has done a number of covers (and different versions of the same covers)... Which cover, is your favorite and why?...

I would say it's a toss up between "No Quarter" (Led Zeppelin cover), and "Stranglehold" (Ted Nugent cover)... Leaning a bit more towards "No Quarter", as I think it is probably one of the best covers ever performed...

Anyone else... Shannon, what about you?




;)
 
That sounds really interesting, I'm going to have to check this out.

Some people look very deep into things and it brings out a lot of missed things , I admire the knowledge so many people around here have.
 
Delphic Reason
Anyone else... Shannon, what about you?
"No Quarter" brings whole new meaning to the word 'cover'. It's not just Tool's best cover, but the best cover any band has ever done. 👍

I'll be sure to check out that movie too. Sounds interesting.
 
Anyone who can cover a Led Zeppelin cover and make it sound good gets extra points in my book. To me, covering Led Zeppelin is generally a big no-no.

I'm glad this was brought back up, it was a very intriguing read. I love to expand my musical knowledge. I'm tempted to take some time to hunt down Lateralus somewhere in my collection now and do some re-ordering.

A big, belated thanks for that, Shannon. Though, I vaguely remember you trying to explain something of the like to me some time ago.
 
Shannon
"No Quarter" brings whole new meaning to the word 'cover'. It's not just Tool's best cover, but the best cover any band has ever done. 👍

Good call...

I'm going to be rearanging the songs later tonight... I started doing it a while back, but I became sidetracked and never got back to it...



;)
 
xcsti
Not exactly tool but a perfect circle had a cover of david bowie's ashes to ashes that was amazing.

Another good choice... Far superior to the original, in my opinion...





;)
 
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