Biography
:
Nearly
as much as Metallica or Megadeth, Anthrax was responsible for the
emergence of speed and thrash metal; combining the speed and fury
of hardcore punk with the prominent guitars and vocals of heavy
metal, they helped create a new subgenre of heavy metal on their
early albums. Original guitarists Scott Ian and Dan Spitz were a
formidable pair, spitting out lightning-fast riffs and solos that
never seemed masturbatory. Unlike Metallica or Megadeth, they had
the good sense to temper their often serious music with a healthy
dose of humor and realism. After their first album, Fistful of Metal,
singer Joey Belladonna and bassist Frank Bello joined the lineup.
Belladonna helped take the band farther away from conventional metal
clichés, and over the next five albums (with the exception
of 1988's State of Euphoria, where the band sounded like they were
in a creative straitjacket), Anthrax arguably became the leaders
of speed metal. As the '80s became the '90s, they also began to
increase their experiments with hip-hop, culminating in a tour with
Public Enemy in 1991 and a joint re-recording of PE's classic "Bring
the Noise." After their peak period of the late '80s, Anthrax
kicked Belladonna out of the band in 1992 and replaced him with
ex-Armored Saint vocalist John Bush -- a singer that was gruffer
and deeper, fitting most metal conventions perfectly. Subsequently,
their sound became less unique and their audience shrank slightly
as a consequence, and after signing to Elektra for 1993's Sound
of White Noise, the group left the label after just one more album,
1995's Stomp 442. At that point, Anthrax -- now a four-piece consisting
of Ian, Bush, Bello, and drummer Charlie Benante -- built their
own studio in Yonkers, NY, and after a three-year hiatus returned
with their Ignition label debut The Threat Is Real, Vol. 8. 1999
saw the release of Anthrax's very first "hits" collection,
titled Return of the Killer A's: The Best Of, also their first release
for the Beyond label. The album included a cover of "Ball of
Confusion," which featured a duet between current frontman
Bush and former vocalist Belladonna. A proposed tour that was to
include both vocalists was announced, but on the eve of its launch,
Belladonna pulled out for supposed monetary reasons. The tour carried
on, as Anthrax signed on to participate in a package tour during
the summer of 2000 with Mötley Crüe and Megadeth, but
left the tour after only playing a handful of dates. Anthrax appeared
on the Twisted Sister tribute album Twisted Forever in 2001 (covering
the track "Destroyer"), and began recording their next
album the same year. In addition, guitarist Ian found time to regularly
host the metal television program Rock Show on VH1, plus appearing
as part of the fictional metal band Titannica in the film Run, Ronnie,
Run. VH1 programming heads would eventually replace Ian with Sebastian
Bach, but the band was ready to head back into the studio anyway.
New guitarist Rob Caggiano joined in the spring of 2002, just in
time for the recording. A year later, Anthrax made their Sanctuary
debut with We've Come For You All. The band's dynamic hadn't changed
and touring in support of that album was met with overwhelming success.
The CD/DVD set Music of Mass Destruction: Live in Chicago, which
arrived in Spring 2004, celebrated that and Anthrax's twentysome
years in the business. |