Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Live Videos Recall: TOOL live in Philadelphia, 1992 January 19, 2012 1 min read TOOL performing their song “Jerk Off” live on May 2, 1992 at JC Dobbs in Philadelphia, PA. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: metalprogressiverocktool Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in April 28, 2026 Still Doing It: Micro-Tours in Your Forties April 23, 2026 Scott Vogel and TERROR mark album ten with “Still Suffer” and new documentary March 16, 2026 EPILEPSIA DC – almost 20 years of not fitting in, and a symphonic live EP that proves noise has no borders May 28, 2025 BENEATH A STEEL SKY channel post-metal weight and instrumental introspection in new quality live session Previous Story Recall: AGNOSTIC FRONT 12 XU show, 1986 Next Story MAN OVERBOARD live in Vineland, NJ Latest Indian mathcore machine MANEATING ORCHID Maneating Orchid pull Bad Brains, Gorguts and a Zorn-style swing section into “Cosmic Shroud” BRAT FARRAR channel early Wipers and Husker Du on “Group”, their first full-band album Philly’s BLUNT FORCE push back on apolitical hardcore across their harsh debut demo ALARM! return with “Failure By Design,” shaped by a closed Corby steelworks and a Chomsky documentary Bergamo’s horror punk rockers THE CRIMSON GHOST wrap their three-EP horror cycle with Witchcraft
March 16, 2026 EPILEPSIA DC – almost 20 years of not fitting in, and a symphonic live EP that proves noise has no borders
May 28, 2025 BENEATH A STEEL SKY channel post-metal weight and instrumental introspection in new quality live session
Indian mathcore machine MANEATING ORCHID Maneating Orchid pull Bad Brains, Gorguts and a Zorn-style swing section into “Cosmic Shroud”
ALARM! return with “Failure By Design,” shaped by a closed Corby steelworks and a Chomsky documentary