American rock supergroup
A Perfect Circle was formed in the late '90s by
Tool vocalist
Maynard James Keenan and former
Tool guitar tech
Billy Howerdel. On their debut,
Mer de Noms,
A Perfect Circle were seen as an extension of the alt-metal-fused-with-art-rock style popularized by
Tool in the early to mid-'90s. Despite comparisons, however,
A Perfect Circle quickly developed into its own entity, focusing on lighter and more melodic sounds that were combined with a theatrical, ambient quality incorporating occasional strings and unconventional instrumentation on later albums like
Thirteenth Step and
Eat the Elephant. Over the decades, members of
Nine Inch Nails,
Marilyn Manson,
Smashing Pumpkins, and
Queens of the Stone Age have played a role in the band's revolving lineup under the core songwriting duo of
Keenan and
Howerdel.
After the release of
Ænima in 1996,
Tool found themselves in the midst of an extended legal battle with former label Freeworld Entertainment. When the dust settled two years later, the band reached a 50-50 joint venture agreement for future recordings and, feeling a little burned out, decided to take some time off. It was at this point that
Keenan joined up with
Howerdel and
Paz Lenchantin to form
A Perfect Circle.
Keenan had met
Howerdel in 1992 when
Tool opened for
Fishbone.
Howerdel had been
Fishbone's tech at the time and he played
Keenan a few of his songs.
Keenan was impressed and the two talked of collaborating in the future. However, the opportunity wouldn't present itself until the end of the decade. With
Keenan on vocals,
Howerdel on guitar, and
Lenchantin on bass, the trio recruited ex-
Failure and Enemy member
Troy Van Leeuwen on guitar and ex-
Vandals and
Guns N' Roses member
Josh Freese on drums.
The quintet rehearsed together but didn't announce the formation of a new band until performing for the first time on August 15, 1999, at a benefit concert at the Viper Room in Los Angeles.
Howerdel, who had been composing songs for years, as well as working with bands such as
the Smashing Pumpkins and
Nine Inch Nails, became the band's chief songwriter and producer.
A Perfect Circle released their debut album,
Mer de Noms, in 2000. Featuring the hit singles "Judith" and "3 Libras,"
Mer de Noms debuted in the Top Five of the Billboard 200 and eventually went platinum. The band opened
Nine Inch Nails' Fragility Tour in 2000, but soon attracted their own headlining audience. The band took a short break between albums, allowing
Keenan to hop back to
Tool for the release and promotion of 2001's
Lateralus.
In the meantime, preparation for
A Perfect Circle's sophomore effort continued.
Lenchantin and
Van Leeuwen -- both involved with other projects at the time -- were swapped out for
Jeordie White (
Marilyn Manson) and
Danny Lohner (
Nine Inch Nails), respectively.
Keenan returned to the fold in early 2003. Months later,
Thirteenth Step arrived, debuting at number two on the Billboard 200. Moodier and more expansive, the set included Top Five rock chart singles "Weak and Powerless" and "The Outsider."
Lohner made way for
James Iha (
Smashing Pumpkins) as the band embarked on an international tour.
Concluding the trek,
A Perfect Circle issued the covers album
eMOTIVe in 2004. The politically charged, anti-war collection featured interpretations of songs like
John Lennon's "Imagine,"
Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On," and
Depeche Mode's "People Are People." The album was also notable for the inclusion of new track "Counting Bodies Like Sheep to the Rhythm of the War Drum" and "Passive," a holy grail for fans written by
Keenan,
Howerdel,
Lohner, and
Trent Reznor for their scrapped Tapeworm project.
Shortly after the release of
eMOTIVe's companion DVD set
aMOTION -- which bundled the band's music videos along with a remix CD --
A Perfect Circle went on a hiatus that would last over a decade. During their downtime,
Keenan recorded albums with
Tool and his solo project,
Puscifer, while
Howerdel started a new band,
Ashes Divide. While rumors of the band writing songs cropped up now and again,
A Perfect Circle returned (to the stage, at least) in 2010, and released a new song, "By and Down," on their 2013 greatest-hits compilation
Three Sixty. However, it would be another half-decade before an official return.
In late 2017, the group reunited for a tour of the United States, teasing fans with the possibility of a trek to the studio. They issued the single "The Doomed," their first new song in over a decade. "Disillusioned" and "TalkTalk" followed in early 2018. That April,
A Perfect Circle released their fourth LP,
Eat the Elephant, with another revamped lineup that added
Matt McJunkins (
Eagles of Death Metal) and
Jeff Friedl (
Puscifer) to the
Keenan/
Howerdel/
Iha trio. As political as
eMOTIVe and even more melodic than
Thirteenth Step,
Eat the Elephant also marked the first time the band recruited an outside producer; namely,
Dave Sardy. ~ Neil Z. Yeung & Tracy Frey