- Tool aenima album cover 500x500 cracked#
- Tool aenima album cover 500x500 archive#
- Tool aenima album cover 500x500 Offline#
Shortly thereafter, all of their albums cracked the iTunes download charts, with Lateralus becoming the most downloaded album on iTunes. On Friday, the band's back catalog finally hit streaming services.
Tool aenima album cover 500x500 Offline#
After a server crashed, t.d.n was offline for three months in late 1998.This old menu doesn't look THAT awful by today's standards. As modems gave way to high-speed Internet, the site was redesigned to take advantage of the higher bandwidth.This is typical of how the site looked that summer.A whimsical stab at a front page layout.Introducing some new icons to the site, some of which are still in use today.All 200 sold out within 24 hours despite the ugliness of this page. Announcing the availability of t.d.n shirts.This is how we really used to get our newspapers online. The announcement of Tool as part of Lollapalooza 1997's lineup.An example of what the site front looked like back then.
Tool aenima album cover 500x500 archive#
Check the News archive for the whole story if you don't know it. This is the original front page of the April Fools prank from back in 1997. Visitors to The Tool Page would see a main start page next to the menu, which was along the lines of these. When "Ænima" came out, this site used a frames layout, with the menu running down the left side. A page exhorting fans to buy the newly-released "Ænima." We were doing promotion online before online promotion even existed.Announcing the release of "Ænima" on vinyl, and finally showcasing the album cover.A hilarious foray into tacky marketing speak.A list of album release dates, to get people stoked about the release of "Ænima", like they needed this list to be excited.This awesome page was the high-tech front page when we knew the title and release date - but not the cover - of the then-forthcoming album "Ænima".
From an exciting day, when we learned the song titles on the then-forthcoming album "Ænima." This was the first public place anywhere that had this information, before trade magazines, before MTV - and remember, there was no official site back then.I was still in college, and the site was still using that awesome original logo. This was to warn people that the site was moving to its current address,.I fixed some links to work within these pages, but not all do. If you've been with us since the mid-90s, some of these may be like familiar pictures of an old friend.Īnd it must be said that the idea for this page is a complete ripoff of a similar page at Seth Aperl's old Soundgarden site. If you're a newer visitor to The Tool Page, now you can see what the site was like as it grew up. Did we ever think it was OK to use tables that way? Was that really the way the site looked back then? It's part-funny, part-awful, and part-nostalgic to look through these. It turns out that through the years, I've saved various old versions of the front page of this site.