- Indoor Festival 2001
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- Indoor Festival 2005
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- B.O.A 2005
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Playing: Bloodstock 2013 Sunday 11, Ronnie James Dio Stage - Buy Tickets
Rewind to 2005. Hot on the heels of 2003′s rapturously
received We’ve Come For You All, a unanimously praised, end-to-end scorcher
spearheaded by vocalist John Bush, Anthrax shocked the metal world with the
announcement that singer Joey Belladonna would be re-joining the band for a
classic, 80s-era reunion that would sweep them around the world on a wave of
head-banging nostalgia, but more importantly, reconnecting the band as friends
and as the brutal thrash machine that gave the world Among The Living.
Once that tour finished, Anthrax returned to discover that
John Bush had moved on, and they would need to recruit yet another singer for
the recording of their follow-up to WCFYA, the album that would become Worship
Music, their tenth studio album. The band worked with one singer for a period
of time, but in 2009, they were still without the right vocalist.
“There was no way I was going to let anything derail my
life’s work,” says Scott Ian. “We’ve been through more drama than most bands
experience in a lifetime. Granted, we didn’t have to deal with somebody dying
or some tragic situation but at the same time we really did face an uncertain
future. For lack of a better way to explain it, I am a tenacious prick, and if
I want something to happen I will make it so. It’s always been like that. It
touches on the 30th anniversary. I think back to July 18, 1981. Danny Lilker
and I were friends and I always said to him, ‘when White Heat [Lilker’s band at
the time] break up, we’re forming Anthrax,’ and he was like, ‘we’re not
breaking up.’ I’ve always been like that, and with such an amazing record to
put out, there’s no way I was going to let anything screw that up.”
Refusing to accept their predicament, the remaining members
rallied themselves in a spine-tingling gesture of conviction and self-belief
for what would become the single greatest metal event of the 21st century, the
first-ever performance of The Big 4. According to Charlie Benante, getting the
band’s proverbial excrement together for that gig was just the motivation that
Anthrax needed to spit out the blood and get back on their feet.
“The genesis of this whole Big 4 idea – and you could say
the idea of getting Joey back in the band full time – was at the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame,” Benante continues. “It was me, Lars, and Scott talking at the
bar, bullshitting, and Lars just blurted it out. It was such a surreal moment,
we weren’t sure if he was taking the piss out of us and all of a sudden it just
happened. It made us really say ‘we need to step this up and get this thing
going.’ It was because of that that we were pushed into this direction.
Metallica gave us the kick in the ass that we needed.”
“Joey was the band’s vocalist from ’85 to ’92, the time
period when ‘The Big Four’ started,” added Scott, “so we felt he had to be the
guy to represent us on these Big Four shows, and he had to be the guy on the
new record.”
Rob Caggiano picks up the story – “So Charlie called Joey,
they started talking and Joey expressed an interest. Then we all met with him
in New York and while the vibe was really good, none of us really knew what to
expect. Then we did the first Big 4 show with Joey, I think that’s when we all
knew that this was right. The vibe was amazing, he sounds better than he’s ever
sounded, including the reunion tour.”
Reuniting with Joey Belladonna for a whirlwind,
globe-stomping tour that would see Anthrax playing shoulder to shoulder with
Slayer, Megadeth and old pals Metallica, the explosive success of The Big 4
would suddenly beg the question of what would happen next, and more to the
point: who would sing on Worship Music, and how would Anthrax approach the
follow-up to We’ve Come For You All? It wasn’t easy, but – from the ferocious
attack of “Earth on Hell” to the red-blooded might of “Fight’em ‘Til You
Can’t,” the results have been nothing less than horn-conjuring.
“The majority of this record was about 55% done before we
even had a singer in mind,” explains Charlie. “It was me, Scott and Frankie in
our rehearsal room, the same way we wrote Spreading the Disease – with no
singer in mind. But I’ll never forget the day I first heard Joey singing, I got
goosebumps, I got excited – all I could think of in my mind was ‘how will he
sing this song’ and it was just amazing to me. Every time I heard the next song
I would be like, ‘this rules.’”
“The process leading up to it was painful but I think being
in Anthrax is painful,” says bassist Frank Bello with a laugh. “I think
everything happens for a reason and to listen to this record now, this is the
reason it had to happen that way, and I am loving Joey’s voice. I’m listening
and I’m thinking ‘you know I can’t tell you when he sang better.’ I’m not gonna
kiss his ass that much but I really think the guy just doesn’t age. He weirds
me out because he just goes out there and sings like a bird, amazingly, with
power. He came into a hard situation. He really rose to it. When Joey came in
it was like the icing on the cake for me. ”
Joey agrees: “It’s not easy to throw someone in there and
try to wash away what you’ve done and how you’ve done it,” says Joey. “I feel
honored, but I also feel like I’ve done a lot to be there, I wasn’t just saying
‘oh I’ve got a chance again.’ I just thought I’d be who I was without being
like ‘can I be like someone else?’ I just went in and sang with the best
intentions. I just did whatever came from my heart to the best of my abilities,
and it worked.”
And that is an understatement. Co-produced by Rob Caggiano
and Jay Ruston (both Grammy-nominated producers), the album takes its name from
one of Charlie’s late-night bouts of insomnia where, while flipping through TV
channels he stumbled upon a religious-themed infomercial entitled “Worship Music.”
A fitting sentiment for an undeniable masterwork of skewering melodies powered
by herculean riffage and a tunefulness that bespeaks Anthrax’s utter supremacy
as songwriters. From the haunting, ethereal tones of “Worship” – an atmospheric
piece composed by Charlie himself – to the punch-in-the-face assault of opening
track “Earth On Hell,” the results are positively badass. But that isn’t to say
Worship Music is without its deeper subtexts.
“The song “In the End” has a melancholy feel to it,” says Charlie.
“It has nothing to do with the band, but two people who had a lot to do with
our band, Dimebag and Ronnie James Dio. They were both heroes and huge
influences on us. Darrell played on the last three Anthrax records, a sixth
member if you will, and Ronnie was always a champion for us, taking us on tour,
just being so amazing to us always. It had to be made, and it was very
cathartic.”
“It’s just an epic piece of music,” adds Scott. “Of course
in the back of my mind I was thinking, ‘if somehow I could get this in the
lyrics without it being completely cornball, that song would just lend itself
to expressing the feelings and emotions about how we felt about what those guys
meant to us — Did we ever tell you how much we loved you tearing my head off tearing
my face off ripping my heart out.” I meant that in a good way. The first time I
ever heard Ronnie James Dio, my world was fucked forever.”
Of course, Worship Music also features a far more obvious
musical tribute about Anthrax’s greatest inspiration, Judas Priest, mysteriously
entitled… “Judas Priest.”
“We wrote it right at the time the announcement came that
they were retiring,” says Scott. “I just got so bummed out about it, almost the
same way I felt with Ronnie dying or Darrell getting killed, it was a similar
emotion, like: ‘is this what it’s like now, I’m just going to see my heroes
go?’ It kind of depressed me. The thought of a world without Judas Priest is
just weird, so I remember talking to Charlie and we agreed we should just write
a song called ‘Judas Priest.’ It was such an overtly, metal song, and that in
of itself is the tribute.”
Alongside the colossal crescendo of “Crawl” and the
irresistible catchiness of “The Devil You Know,” Worship Music is a record of
mass destruction to be released upon the world, and to the delight of fans
everywhere it already began when, in July, the Anthrax.com was updated with new
artwork by universally acclaimed comic artist Alex Ross and an offering of
“Fight’em ‘Til You Can’t” as a free download that swept across the internet
like a thrash metal hurricane.
“Basically, we made our fans wait so long so it was like
‘why make our fans pay for it?” says Charlie. “They’ve waited so long, so
here’s a gift.’”
“’Fight’em ‘Til You Can’t’ is about humans fighting the
Cylons,” adds Scott, referring to the title’s relationship to a famous line in
the recently re-imagined space epic “Battlestar Galactica.” “My take is more
Zombie-oriented than Cylon oriented, but I think you could absolutely read it
as Anthrax fighting until we can’t. I’m sure that was in the back of my mind.
As much as I like the idea of it just being a fun-filled Zombie killing romp,
that emotional thread pretty much runs through everything I’m doing lyrically,
you can’t keep me down, I’m gonna do what I’m gonna do.”
Given that this year Anthrax celebrates its 30th anniversary
of fighting the good fight, Scott’s sentiment is a poignant one. So how does it
feel to be releasing a new record over three decades since you began?
“It freaks me out actually, that that much time has gone
by,” says Charlie. “In my mind I still feel like the same person from back
then, but if we were to do this ten years ago, I would be more concerned about
staying relevant and this time I could care less about staying relevant. It’s
about doing what I think our fans enjoy.
“I truly can’t put it into any kind of context because we’re
just so busy, you know? We’re sitting here with this setup of a record in the
middle of playing shows with so much going on, so I guess I could say nothing
is changed, things are exactly the same as when we’re working toward the next
thing and that’s maybe somehow some way we’ve always been able to move forward,
always looking forward and never stopping – it’s never been that way with
Anthrax, even just this constant struggle to find band members who would commit
to rehearsing for four nights a week and having to fire them, it was constantly
moving forward until we recorded Fistful of Metal, well we’ve gotta go on tour
and sell t-shirts, and we’ve gotta get rid of Neil Turbin, and then we found
Joey… In 2011 my day is still filled with what’s happening with Anthrax, and I
love this new record and how it represents our whole career in Anthrax. I can’t
wait for people to hear it.
Over the past 30 years, Anthrax has achieved sales in excess of 10-million. The band has also received multiple Gold and Platinum albums, multiple Grammy nominations, and a host of other accolades from the media, industry and fans.
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