Intronaut's Tour Diary: From Playing Clubs to Opening for Tool in Sports Arenas
See also: Intronaut's Tour Diary II: Buying Weed in the Middle of Nowhere![]()
Sacha Dunable Intronaut. (L-R): vocalist/guitarist Sacha Dunable; bassist Joe Lester; vocalist/guitarist Dave Timnick (not pictured: drummer Danny Walker).
Intronaut's thunderous blend of sludge-doom and post-rock (most recently on display in their 2010 album Valley Of Smoke) has earned critical praise as well as tours with metal luminaries such as Mastodon, Isis, and Animals As Leaders. Now, the L.A. quartet has embarked on their biggest excursion to date, opening for Tool on their current arena tour. Intronaut vocalist/guitarist Sacha Dunable kept a diary for us on the first day of the tour, which was this past Saturday in Reno, Nevada.
Hi, my name is Sacha. Eight years ago I started a band called Intronaut with some friends I've known for half of my life. For the next couple weeks, we'll be on tour in arenas throughout North America as support for Tool, which is a pretty significant change from the club shows we normally play. We are only a couple days in on this tour so far and I'm still wrapping my head around exactly what is going on around me, but here's a brief rundown on the madness that was our first day.
1/14/12, 1:00 pm - We arrive at Reno Events Center and find a parking spot for our Dodge Sprinter van amidst Tool's six tour buses and six big rig trucks. This is the first of many hilarious examples of disproportion we would experience throughout the tour. Tool's production manager takes one look at our van and asks us if we'd be interested in having them carry our equipment in one of their trucks, since it takes up approximately 1/100th of one truck. We now get about one million more miles to each gallon of diesel. Thanks, Tool!
1/14/12, 3:30 pm - I'm guessing Intronaut has played over 500 shows in our eight year existence, in all kinds of clubs and theaters around the world. I don't think I've ever had any real reaction to a room we were about to play, let alone been completely overwhelmed like I was when we walked into the enormous Reno Events Center Arena. I don't know exactly why the thought of playing to 8,000 people is so much more intimidating than playing to 800, but it is, and if you don't understand that, you probably don't have any feelings.
1/14/12, 9:00 pm - For some strange reason, I didn't get nervous at all before our set. Even at club shows, I'll get light jitters for the last few minutes before we play. It could have been the fact that we were in a locker room like a mile from the stage, or that I was a couple beers and shots deep at whatever high elevation Reno is, or that a couple of the Tool guys stopped by to say hello before we went on. Whatever the case may be, we hit the stage in good spirits and rocked it. I could seriously get used to playing arenas.![]()
Sacha Dunable Dressing in sports arena locker rooms: a new experience for Intronaut

































