Pioneering hip-hop act Public Enemy mentioned thrash metal band Anthrax in its groundbreaking 1987 song “Bring the Noise.” The seemingly unlikely reference indicated that the members of Public Enemy considered Anthrax a similarly disruptive act bent on challenging established conventions in music.
The band headlined a four-hour concert characterized by jolting displays of extreme speed, alarming volume and rampant violence. The barbarous flailing in the mosh pit, reckless crowd surfing and foolhardy head-banging might have frightened the unconverted, but most in the audience seemed to find the chaos invigorating. Unfortunately, Scott Ian wasn’t on hand to instigate further mayhem. According to an announcement posted on the venue’s doors after the concert began, “an unexpected illness” prevented the most recognizable member of Anthrax from appearing.
“Thanks for bearing with us,” vocalist Joey Belladonna said as he explained Ian’s absence. “We’ll be as good as we can.”
Anthrax performed a handful of songs as a quartet, but most of the band’s 85-minute set featured additional musicians recruited from opening acts Testament and Death Angel in an effort to compensate for Ian’s absence. As instruments were swapped and musicians shuttled on and off the stage between selections, Anthrax’s performance resembled a freewheeling jam session. While it was a fascinating spectacle, the result was understandably sloppy. Even Belladonna, a typically brash front man, became flustered.
“Who’s next?” he once asked. “I don’t even know who’s coming in and out.”
The difficult circumstances allowed Testament to outshine Anthrax. The fearsome set by the veteran thrash act was a study in contrasts. As hulking vocalist Chuck Billy bellowed ominously, svelte guitarist Alex Skolnick played with dazzling complexity.
In a genre that doesn’t always prize such qualities, Skolnick’s work is nuanced and artful. His subtleties are especially remarkable given the blinding speed of most of Testament’s material. During “Into the Pit” the frenetic strobe lighting failed to keep pace with the song’s hypersonic tempo.
Speed was also the defining factor in the opening set of Death Angel. Its precisely synchronized pummeling impressed early arrivals. Those fans didn’t yet realize that they were about to witness a particularly odd evening in Anthrax’s remarkably loud career.
| Bill Brownlee, Special to the Star
Thanks Bill; glad I skipped this class...
Posted by: MetalHEAD | January 27, 2012 at 02:57 PM
Jeezuz, please tell me that's a still shot taken from American History X and not a pic of fans at last night's show.
Posted by: pellboy | January 27, 2012 at 03:39 PM
I was there. DEATH ANGEL was like borderline phenomenal!! Too bad they only got 25-30 minutes. But then again they were the support band. TESTAMENT was the best. Hope that SCOTT IAN gets well soon + ANTHRAX was still good. Maybe not great but very good. Many thanks to 98.9 The Rock.
Posted by: Bubba | January 27, 2012 at 04:39 PM
Anthrax - I Am The Law
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzcyyPQdSLk
Enjoy!
Posted by: Gonzo | January 29, 2012 at 12:07 PM
Anthrax set list:
http://tinyurl.com/7sra77m
Posted by: Tim Finn | January 29, 2012 at 01:17 PM
Here's the official notification of Scott Ian's illness:
http://www.divshare.com/download/16674276-e48
Posted by: Bill Brownlee | January 29, 2012 at 01:45 PM