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When he's not fronting
Tool and
A Perfect Circle, Midwest-bred singer/songwriter
Maynard James Keenan exorcises his solo demons with a third project dubbed
Puscifer. As an outlet for the darker and more personal musings that don't quite fit into the
Tool and
APC molds,
Puscifer blends introspective reflection and sophomoric humor in a way that is distinctly
Keenan, apparent in the titles of releases such as the 2007 debut
V Is for Vagina, 2013's
Donkey Punch the Night, and 2015's
Money $hot. By 2020, in light of world events,
Keenan and company buckled down and got a little more serious for their fourth set,
Existential Reckoning.
While one might imagine
Keenan would have enough going on to keep him busy as vocalist for
Tool and
A Perfect Circle, in 2007 he decided to branch out with a project called
Puscifer. Described by
Keenan as "the space where my Id, Ego, and Anima all come together to exchange cookie recipes,"
Puscifer first appeared as the name of a fictional band
Keenan fronted in a cameo on the HBO sketch comedy series Mr. Show in 1995. It wasn't until 2003 that
Keenan actually recorded under the name, when he teamed up with
Danny Lohner for a track called "Rev 22:20" for the Underworld soundtrack. Four years later, he set to work on an entire
Puscifer album. Organized less as a traditional "rock band" and more as a musical collective in which
Keenan could work with a rotating lineup of like-minded artists,
Puscifer's early recording projects featured a large cast of noted musicians, including
Tim Alexander from
Primus,
Tim Commerford and
Brad Wilk from
Audioslave and
Rage Against the Machine, former
King Crimson member
Trey Gunn, violinist
Lisa Germano, pop singer/songwriter
Jonny Polonsky, and actress and vocalist Milla Jovovich.
The first product of
Puscifer's new life was a single issued in early October 2007; the A-side was "Cuntry Boner," a gleefully offensive song originally recorded by
Electric Sheep (a short-lived punk band featuring
Adam Jones and
Tom Morello years before they would respectively join
Tool and
Rage Against the Machine), while the flip side was a cover of
the Circle Jerks' "World Up My Ass." Later the same month,
Puscifer's debut album,
V Is for Vagina, was released; like the single, it was issued in the United States by
Keenan's own
Puscifer label, and it featured ten original songs, many of which were dominated by slow but potent dance grooves rather than
Tool's prog metal textures.
Keenan said the group had no immediate plans to tour, but he was collaborating with several filmmakers on short movies based on the songs, which could be shown at live performances. In April 2008, a remix album titled
V Is for Viagra: The Remixes was released and featured contributions from members of
Nine Inch Nails,
Telefon Tel Aviv,
Ministry, and
Slipknot, among others.
Keenan returned the following year with the EP
"C" Is For (Please Insert Sophomoric Genitalia Reference Here) before releasing the full-length
Conditions of My Parole in 2011. The EP
Donkey Punch in the Night arrived in 2013 with a pair of new tracks, as well as covers of
Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" and
Accept's "Balls to the Wall."
Money $hot, the band's third studio LP, followed in 2015 and featured the single "Grand Canyon." A remix collection,
Money $hot Your Re-Load, arrived the next year. To close out the decade,
Keenan revived both
A Perfect Circle and
Tool, which kept him busy into 2020. That year, along with longtime collaborators
Carina Round and
Mat Mitchell,
Puscifer issued their fourth long-player,
Existential Reckoning. More subdued and with less jokes than usual, the album took aim at American society in a year consumed by pandemic and political turmoil, which could be heard on the singles "Apocalyptical" and "The Underwhelming." It reached number seven on Billboard's Top Alternative Albums chart and was followed by the 2021 concert recording
Existential Reckoning: Live at Arcosanti. ~ Mark Deming & Neil Z. Yeung