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Laturalus will blow your mind (more than you already know)

sabbathsabbath Posts: 35
edited December 2005 in Other Music
Holy crap, I read this on songfacts, some people might already know about this, but it is seriously crazy. You'll just have to read to know what it says 'cause I can't even begin to paraphrase. After you read you might be skeptical, but think: they spent five years on this album. Isn't it possible they planned all of this?

"maybe not so directly about drougs. try reading this: Being a huge fan of Tool, I wanted to know if anyone else knew about this. It's just ...so.....awesome. It's worth the read, trust me. I tried finding out who the original author was, but I couldn't. The first site it popped up on didn't even know. Tool's Lateralus is the most amazing piece of music ever composed. 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 There's a Fibonacci in Maynard's lyrics, specifically the syllables: black [1] then [1] white are [2] all I see [3] in my infancy [5] red and yellow then came to be [8] reaching out to me [5] lets me see [3] there is [2] so [1] much [1] more and [2] beckons me [3] to look through to these [5] infinite possibilities [8] as below so above and beyond I imagine [13] drawn outside the lines of reason [8] push the envelope [5] watch it bend [3] I suppose it's not actually a true Fibonacci, since it does reverse itself."
fkjghldfkjh
Post edited by Unknown User on
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    Yeah, I've read about it somewhere... Crazy, but it seems very logical. There's certainly something more to that album than just music. Pretty crazy stuff. Fuck anyone who says Tool is "just" metal. Progressive metal at the least.
    I chose living only for seeing
  • Options
    Damnit, who are you on DDD?
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    EchoesEchoes Posts: 1,279
    progressive hard rock, maybe.

    It's an okay album. I read this years ago and it was just as insufferabl then, too
    printf("shiver in eternal darkness\n");
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    BUENABUENA Posts: 165
    sabbath wrote:
    Holy crap, I read this on songfacts, some people might already know about this, but it is seriously crazy. You'll just have to read to know what it says 'cause I can't even begin to paraphrase. After you read you might be skeptical, but think: they spent five years on this album. Isn't it possible they planned all of this?

    "maybe not so directly about drougs. try reading this: Being a huge fan of Tool, I wanted to know if anyone else knew about this. It's just ...so.....awesome. It's worth the read, trust me. I tried finding out who the original author was, but I couldn't. The first site it popped up on didn't even know. Tool's Lateralus is the most amazing piece of music ever composed. 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 There's a Fibonacci in Maynard's lyrics, specifically the syllables: black [1] then [1] white are [2] all I see [3] in my infancy [5] red and yellow then came to be [8] reaching out to me [5] lets me see [3] there is [2] so [1] much [1] more and [2] beckons me [3] to look through to these [5] infinite possibilities [8] as below so above and beyond I imagine [13] drawn outside the lines of reason [8] push the envelope [5] watch it bend [3] I suppose it's not actually a true Fibonacci, since it does reverse itself."


    This is taking the love for a band a little too far.
    "It's the American Dream I am disbelieving... When the gas in my tank feels like money in the bank... I’m gonna blow it all this time, take me one last ride..." - Gone (vedder)
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    merkinballmerkinball Posts: 2,262
    OK. Now it all makes sense. Glad that's cleared up.
    "You're no help," he told the lime. This was unfair. It was only a lime; there was nothing special about it at all. It was doing the best it could.

    http://www.last.fm/user/merkinball/
    spotify:user:merkinball
  • Options
    I only own Lateralus and don't find Tool one of my favorite bands but I must admit that's pretty cool. I can appreciate the amount of time they put to make something like that. Kind of makes me wonder what they'll come up with this new album since it's been another 5 years about.
    Pearl Jam Album Rankings
    ---
    1. Ten
    2. Vs.
    3. Pearl Jam
    4. Binaural
    5. No Code
    6. Riot Act
    7. Yield
    8. Vitalogy

    Pearl Jam Song Rankings
    ---
    1. Black
    2. Rearviewmirror
    3. Light Years
    4. Given to Fly
    5. Severed Hand
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    viggs20viggs20 Posts: 1,296
    Yes its pretty cool and the alternate track-list or "The Holy Gift" flows very well.
    "Reality continues to ruin my life." - Calvin & Hobbes.

    www.stopglobalaids.com www.indymedia.org www.ecologyfund.com www.thehungersite.com www.amnesty.org www.pratham.org www.icbl.org www.care2.com/click2donate
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    TimberTimber Posts: 38
    this is so goddamn stupid
    i am disco
  • Options
    viggs20 wrote:
    Yes its pretty cool and the alternate track-list or "The Holy Gift" flows very well.

    Yeah, I prefer this track order than the other one.
  • Options
    This is ridiculous. I can't believe I read the entire thing. I need to listen to some Def Leppard as the antidote.
    It is time to admit that we used to rock like hurricanes. It is time to run for the hills and go round and round. It is time for us to shout at the devil. We've got the right to choose it, there ain't no way we'll lose it, and we're not gonna take it anymore.
    - C. Klosterman
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    and i thought 'Lost' was confusing...
  • Options
    Pretty interesting... they and you have a lot of time on your hands.
    "Everyone is a patriot in some form or another.... i prefer the intelligent ones."

    "She fell funny"

    "Klaus Daimler, 40, engineer, calm, collected, German"
  • Options
    Goddamn it, I wish I had the cd on me-- my friggin brother took it. I'd like to listen to this alternate tracklisting... Interesting points you raise, I've heard about the Fib. sequence, that's definitely in there.

    Gotta wonder though, it's tool. Every song is drop D, has crazy rhythms, although a lot of their songs are different, at heart a lot of them are very much the same. You might be able to put a tool album on shuffle through your music player on your pc and come up with an awesome alternate tracklisting at random.

    Still, I want to entertain this idea you got here,-- might be coincidence though.

    but fuck, 5 years to make an album? i think if anyone had that kind of time making music as 40 hr/week job, you might just be able to come up with something pretty innovative.
  • Options
    Ok, turns out I had the cd, my brother's off the hook...

    gave the "Holy Gift" a listen. Has it's high points, I think the parabola / schism thing is pretty cool. There's some other parts with some decent flow... I think towards the end something is off though. It's probably as good as the original tracklisting, but I think a few things are out of whack if there is, in fact, an alternate tracklisting. Like I said, the second half... last 4 or 5 tracks anyway were not so spectacular from song to song.

    As any of those crazy members of TOOL would say,
    "keep digging..."


    those fuckin guys and their digging...

    what a bunch of nutballs.
  • Options
    i would like to mention that a fibonacci sequence isn't a big deal...it's just addition.
    I'll dig a tunnel
    from my window to yours
  • Options
    EvilMerlinEvilMerlin Posts: 1,865
    Why does everyone think it takes them five years to make the albums? They're not working on them for five years. After lateralus they toured a good two years straight. Then Maynard went on to APC to record his lyrics, then toured, then took a break. Danny Carey is also apart of side projects, doing his own research and playing live shows as well. Plus the five years before lateralus they toured some, and were in a major court battle with a label dispute. So a lot of their time is spent outside the studio as well. As for the post, we may never be sure as to what all the messages are that tool seems to hide from us, unless they reveal them to us. There's a lot of trickery to them and even if they do reveal their 'secrets' it may just be out of sarcasm. You must remember, they do love to pull a lot of pranks as well. But I think its neat that a lot of fans that love to dig into a band's music like this. Nothing wrong with a person having a different type of hobby. I'm a huge tool fan and have a few friends that like to dig into music like this and hear theories all the time. There's a lot of NIN fans that do the same with Trent's work as well.
  • Options
    U-RU-R Posts: 223
    observe: bLAck and whiTE aRe ALl I See.

    notice how the song lateralis is spelt differently to the album title lateralus? interesting eh?
    if you love somebody, set them free. if somebody loves you, don't fuck up
  • Options
    cool how you figured out the "true" song order of 'lateralus.'

    But whoever spent all the time deciphering tool's little limericks could have saved a lot more time by just picking up the Bible, which is the ultimate blueprint for all mankind, and it contains the ONLY path to everlasting life, which is putting faith in Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior.

    Good day.
  • Options
    frogwater wrote:
    cool how you figured out the "true" song order of 'lateralus.'

    But whoever spent all the time deciphering tool's little limericks could have saved a lot more time by just picking up the Bible, which is the ultimate blueprint for all mankind, and it contains the ONLY path to everlasting life, which is putting faith in Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior.

    Good day.


    Yea, first listen to Jesus and love one another....then go to St. Paul and hate homosexuals, eh?


    Personally, as a band, even though I don't like TOOL, I like how they work musically and what you came up with was interesting. Next time tho, break it up into a few paragraphs....I kept hoping I wouldn't lose my place.
    Power without Perception is virtually useless and therefore of no true value
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    EchoesEchoes Posts: 1,279
    The hate homosexuals is actually derived from Leviticus, IIRC
    printf("shiver in eternal darkness\n");
  • Options
    Echoes wrote:
    The hate homosexuals is actually derived from Leviticus, IIRC


    In the end, my point is the same but thanks for correction.
    Power without Perception is virtually useless and therefore of no true value
  • Options
    kenny olavkenny olav Posts: 3,323
    frogwater wrote:
    cool how you figured out the "true" song order of 'lateralus.'

    But whoever spent all the time deciphering tool's little limericks could have saved a lot more time by just picking up the Bible, which is the ultimate blueprint for all mankind, and it contains the ONLY path to everlasting life, which is putting faith in Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior.

    Good day.


    I'm still not getting how someone could be both Lord and Savior. Its like being Master and Abolitionist.
  • Options
    EchoesEchoes Posts: 1,279
    How is it hard to understand that someone can save you and be your lord because of it?

    I mean, I am not really that christian, but I can at least understand the phrase
    printf("shiver in eternal darkness\n");
  • Options
    kenny olavkenny olav Posts: 3,323
    It was a little hard to get thru that giant rambling paragraph, but I'm now very curious to check out this alternate order for Lateralus, which I feel is one of the most spellbinding and fulfilling albums out there.
  • Options
    kenny olavkenny olav Posts: 3,323
    Echoes wrote:
    How is it hard to understand that someone can save you and be your lord because of it?

    I mean, I am not really that christian, but I can at least understand the phrase


    If being saved means giving your life away, then I guess it makes sense. 'Let go, and let God' - i heard it all growing up evangelical, but i don't buy it anymore.
  • Options
    "Son, I don't understand I word you just said."
    "every show is a great show. bitches...." --twolegsyield
  • Options
    Aenima's still better
  • Options
    Aenima's still better

    Agreed.

    No matter what order you listen to the songs on "Lateralus," it still sounds like a Rush cover album, or worse, an Asia cover album.
  • Options
    Aenima's still my favorite too but Lateralus is a great album and I can't wait until I get home to listen to this alternative track listing. It's going to be a pain listening to it on vinyl though. At least I should be able to make the tracks over lap in the right places.
    The reason the main stream is thought of as a stream is because it's so shallow. -George Carlin-
  • Options
    HYLAHYLA Posts: 137
    Everytime I see someone getting too deep in Tool, I am reminded of this:

    All you read and
    Wear or see and
    Hear on TV
    Is a product
    Begging for your
    Fatass dirty
    Dollar

    So...Shut up and

    Buy my new record
    Send more money
    Fuck you, buddy.
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