The Tomahawk story begins in 1999, when former Jesus Lizard guitarist Duane Denison met Mike Patton after a Mr. Bungle show in Nashville. They began exchanging notes on song ideas, and decided to launch a project together. With John Stanier (a veteran of Helmet and Mark of Cain) on drums and Kevin Rutmanis (who had worked with the Melvins and the Cows) on bass, the new group headed to Nashville to record with producer and engineer Joe Funderburk, and their self-titled debut album was released by Patton's Ipecac Records label in 2001. Extensive touring followed in North America, Europe, Australia, and Japan, including a number of dates opening for Tool. In 2003, with producer Joe Barresi at the controls, Tomahawk completed their second album, Mit Gas, followed by more live dates.
The various commitments of the musicians meant that it wasn't until 2007 that the group delivered their third album, 2007's Anonymous. Sessions were held in San Francisco, where Patton laid down his vocals and electronic samples, and Nashville, where the rest of the band went to work. Kevin Rutmanis left Tomahawk shortly before the recording of the album, and Duane Denison laid down the bass as well as guitar. The band was on hold for the next several years, and in 2012, Ipecac released Eponymous and Anonymous, a box set that offered their first three albums in one package. Tomahawk regrouped in 2013, with Trevor Dunn of Mr. Bungle on bass, and issued their fourth LP, Oddfellows, through Ipecac. A pair of outtakes from the Oddfellows sessions, "M.E.A.T." and "Curtain Call," were sent out as a single in 2014. Several years later, Denison, Stanier, and Dunn began writing and recording fresh material, and Patton later developed lyrics and vocal melodies for the songs. The result, Toxic Immobility, appeared in 2021. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi