Tool's Justin Chancellor

Published: Feb. 21, 2024, 11:45 p.m.

\u201cWill the next Tool album take more than 10,000 days?\u201d

That was an ongoing (and agonizing) joke for Tool fans that awaited the band\u2019s fifth album following the release of 2006\u2019s 10,000 Days. (A cruel clairvoyance of a title.) For those counting, when Fear Inoculum was finally delivered on August 30, 2019, it was just 4,868 days from their previous album. All crummy jokes aside, the anticipation of the album was real for a reason: the music. And the rhythmic cog of their constant contorting of depth and darkness is bassist Justin Chancellor.

Sure, drummer Danny Carey is a living legend bashing everything his large frame can smash and crash. Adam Jones transforms his guitar into a Hans Zimmer production with varied textures, temperaments, and traits his tone expresses. During shows, singer and lyricist Maynard James Keenan prowls in the shadows adding to the band\u2019s musical mysticism. This triumvirate core dished out the punishing EP Opiate in 1992, and their 1993 debut full-length Undertow was more complex and calculated in its rage. But in 1995, when Justin Chancellor replaced Paul D\u2019Amour on bass, Tool immediately expanded their dimensionality. The original three continued to dazzle and dumbfound listeners, but the addition of Chancellor and his pocket-minded role unlocked a collective vocabulary previously unspoken. Simply put, if Tool was an octopus, Chancellor was the head. The others could be momentarily independent tentacles exploring the melodic murkiness of their respective reaches, but when they needed to propel forward, Chancellor was steering. His lines are the base for the band\u2019s groove and attitude that became a focal point on subsequent releases with 1996\u2019s \xc6nima, 2001\u2019s Lateralus, 2006\u2019s 10,000 Days, and eventually 2019\u2019s Fear Inoculum. The former three went triple-platinum, while the latter three were No. 1 on the Billboard 200. (\xc6nima landed in the No. 2 spot.)

If you ever catch yourself playing air guitar to Tool, you\u2019re probably mimicking Chancellor\u2019s parts. \u201cSchism,\u201d \u201cThe Pot,\u201d \u201cForty Six & 2,\u201d \u201cH.,\u201d \u201cFear Inoculum,\u201d \u201cDescending,\u201d \u201cThe Grudge,\u201d and plenty of others feature his buoyant bass riffs.

Chancellor\u2019s tone has had a longstanding relationship with Wal basses, Gallien-Krueger amps, and Mesa/Boogie cabs. The evolving part of his rig has been his pedalboard. At this juncture of the band\u2019s run supporting Fear Inoculum, Chancellor\u2019s board is larger than his guitar-playing counterparts. Yet everything has a place and purpose. Some of it is duplicity, some of it is to avoid any required knob-turning during the show, and as we find out in the Rundown, some of it is just for fun. Grab a seat and get comfortable as Chancellor and his tech Pete Lewis walk PG\u2019s elated Chris Kies through his live setup.

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