It starts slowly.
A swell of thousands of excited voices in unison, then quelled gently by Maynardโs solitary introductory vocal, โfrom dehumanizationย to arms production, we hasten this nation towards its destruction.โ A sweetly sinister music box melody and Billy Howerdelโs moody guitar work, itโs already enough; the audienceโs attention is entranced in anticipation, the intimacy is infectious, and the stage is already set for Stone and Echoโs Red Rocksย Amphitheater.
โPower is power, the law of the land.
And those living for dead will die by their own hand.โ
Butย just hang on a second, John Lennonโs โImagineโ is peeking round the corner now. That sullen piano line and wonderfully somber vocal always had something twisted-ly captivating about it. โYou may say Iโm a dreamer โ but Iโm not the only one.โ And the showโs only just begun…
Like many, โThe Outsiderโ caught me. Canโt be considered surprising; the roar of the vocals and Howerdelโs guitar riffage in full onslaught on my senses, it was absolutely my kind of music. โDisconnect and self-destruct, one bullet at a timeโ. A Perfect Circleโs signature hit that most know had my attention immediately and completely, but it didnโt stop there. Before long it was the sparse, beautiful โOrestesโ, or the tense introductory bass leading into โWeak and Powerlessโs eclectic electric guitar licks and pitter-patter percussion. Mer De Noms ะธ Thirteenth Step had the kind of allure that meant you had to listen closer, pay more attention or simply risk missing the point, and the momentum lead neatly into 2004 cover album, Emotive. But this was where things came to a close, for a while. With Keenanโs responsibilities towards Tool ะธ Puscifer, ะธ Billy Howerdel focusing on solo project Ashes Divide, A Perfect Circle spent fourteen on-and-off years mostly absent from the scene, save for touring appearances, the greatest hits album Three Sixty, and of course A Perfect Circle Live: Featuring Stone and Echo, in 2013.
The appearance of Eat The Elephant (and itโs thoroughly perplexing artwork) was, at the very least, a little surprising. Sure, the members of A Perfect Circle are not entirely known for taking themselves too seriously, Maynard James Keenan in particular being especially guilty of this; the Puscifer project is filled to the brim with sarcastic references to a number of taboo subjects, even naming their debut studio effort V Is For Vagina, while Toolโs various sexual allusions are relatively self-explanatory. Despite this, taken at face value, Eat The Elephantโs artwork is just plain peculiar, but itโs important to note that it is, of course, everything it was intended to be; take into account just how violently juxtaposed it is by pre-release single โThe Doomedโ, a track stylistically backed by huge Billy Howerdel guitar riffs, furious percussion, and beautifully utilized music box chimes and haunting atmosphere.
Lyrically, โThe Doomedโ spends much of its time being a polar opposite to the ridiculousness of the strange figure that inhabits Eat The Elephantโs artwork, instead engaging in a full-frontal assault against social inequality, โwhat of the meek, the mourning, and the merciful?โ And yet, much like the artwork, โThe Doomedโ is loud, in your face, and catches your attention. It faces the โelephant in the roomโ problem of the lyrical content head on, with Maynard James Keenan vocally toeing the line between vulnerability and enraged frustration, with the trackโs ending boiling point culminating in an eruption of frantic drums and Keenan delivering a final aggressive roar of โfuck the doomed, youโre on your own.โ
To say that Eat The Elephant has immediately painted itself as somewhat confusing to the wary, inattentive listener, is probably accurate enough, but this really is only just scratching the surface of what the album has to offer. Indeed, to completely polarize things right from the very beginning, Eat The Elephantโs introductory title track is the album at its most unexpected; โEat The Elephantโ, a track once in connection with none other than ะะธะฝะบะธะฝ ะะฐัะบโs ะงะตััะตั ะะตะฝะฝะธะฝะณัะพะฝ, is a jazz song. A sweetly delivered, mellow, beautiful jazz song. Gently swaying back and forth in fluttery percussion and light piano keys, Maynard James Keenan croons away with not a hint of guitar distortion in sight, โwithout you to remind me, just begin.โ And begin it does, the track bleeds softly into the more traditionally โA Perfect Circleโ track, โDisillusionedโ. Moody, reverb-heavy guitar work and euphoric atmospherics swell gorgeously behind Keenanโs tentative vocal delivery, lyrically the track reflects on societal disconnection and calls for a change; โtime to put the silicone obsession down, take a look around, find a way in the silence.โ
Continuing onwards, Eat The Elephantโs ever-contrasting stylistic approach keeps things moving forward intriguingly, the tense, overbearing nature of โThe Contrarianโ deceptively welcoming at first, an elegant introductory harp rippling through the mix, before Keenanโs rather disturbing vocal delivery plunges the track into far more harrowing atmosphere. Lyrically the track focuses on the fear of an individual rejecting the popular or socially accepted; โbeware the contrarianโ – beware the one who rejects the norm. Considering the tone of โThe Contrarianโ, this is then completely uprooted by the far more uplifting direction of โSo Long, And Thanks For All The Fishโ, a track that borders on the likes of vibrant, U2-esque guitar tones and euphoric vocal delivery, taken into far more cinematic territory and lyrically describing itself better than anything that could be written here; โHip hip hooray, for this fireworks display. Mind and body blown away, what a radiant crescendo.โ
And so, the album strides forward, delving into some unexpected territory while still maintaining a level of what should be expected from the band; โTalkTalkโ effectively acts as a richly blended result of the heavier Mer De Noms elements with Thirteenth Stepโs more mellow direction, while โBy And Down The Riverโ incorporates more orchestral instrumentals alongside Billy Howerdelโs warped, flanged out lead guitar tones, reminiscent at times of the likes of Riversideโs Piotr Grudziลski, ะธ Maynard James Keenanโs vocal delivery setting a longing, mournful stage for the track to explore. โDeliciousโ mixes acoustic riffs in with some of the more conventional electric guitar riffs of the album, with Howerdel utilizing a chunky overdriven tone and Keenan delivering some of his more sarcastic lyrical content of the album.
Now, while piano instrumental โDLBโ drifts by and allows for a moment to breathe, reflection seems to certainly be the focus for just a few moments; itโs a rather sombre two minutes as the track gently progresses, the mood is low and things are calm, yet feels uneasy. Exactly why this is the case, becomes apparent the instant โHourglassโ enters the fray. Abruptly usurping the poignant mood of its predecessor, โHourglassโs abrasive synthesiser work, robotic vocal processing, and heavy bass has the track sharing far more similarities with the likes of the bandโs iconic โCounting Bodies Like Sheep to the Rhythm of the War Drumsโ, or the more industrial side to Keenanโs Puscifer.
Overall, itโs easily one of the boldest offerings seen on Eat The Elephant, a final punch into stranger territory before the album is lead neatly into the penultimate โFeathersโ, a return to the wailing guitar textures of โDisillusionedโ and โThe Doomedโ. Again, โFeathersโ sees much of the refrained side to Keenanโs roar, far less reliant on the kind of delivery that makes โfuck the doomed, youโre on your ownโ rip through the mix, Keenan instead croons and aches as the track continues, before Billy Howerdel once again takes to the enthralling reverb-heavy lead guitar work that he so effectively brings to light, before closing gently on a last piano section and one final whisper; โmay they become, may they all be feathers.โ
Taking in the broad scope and gorgeous soundscapes Eat The Elephant so lovingly embraces isnโt something that happens quickly. It takes time, attention, and a little bit of patience. At heart, the album is by no means rushing things โ itโs taking every step with exactly the amount of focus it needs. Closing track โGet The Lead Outโ essentially acts as the epilogue to what stands as an absolutely outstanding body of work; a strange, seven minute sample-heavy track, wandering softly with no real aim or reason except to just take a moment. To breathe. Despite carrying the statement of โchit chat, chit chat, ainโt got time for thatโ, it starts slowly, builds gradually and with care, swelling for a moment before Keenan quietens things again. Eat The Elephant simply adores this kind of approach, allowing time to digest the โelephantโ, and this ultimately results in some of the bandโs most brilliant material to date. Itโs been a very long fourteen years, and itโs been well worth it.
โWhat a radiant crescendo.โ