Anthrax
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.
Selected Discography

Anthology: No Hit Wonders (1985-1991)
2005

Alive 2 (2005)
2005

The Greater Of Two Evils
2004

Music Of Mass Destruction: Live From Chicago
2004

We've Come For You All
2003

Fistful Of Metal / Armed And Dangerous
2003

Madhouse: The Very Best Of Anthrax
2001

Stomp 442 (Expanded Edition)
2001

Sound Of White Noise
2001

Attack Of The Killer B's
1991

Persistence Of Time
1990

State Of Euphoria
1988

I'm The Man
1987

Among The Living
1987

Spreading The Disease
1985

Armed And Dangerous
1985

Fistful Of Metal
1984
