Obviously,
Anthrax's
Anthrology: No Hit Wonders 1985-1991 isn't comprehensive. It draws exclusively from the
Joey Belladonna era and ignores
John Bush, not to mention
Dan Lilker, meaning it's flawed like the five other band retrospectives out there. Still, the lineup of
Belladonna,
Ian,
Benante,
Bello, and
Spitz marks the creative zenith when
Anthrax helped mold
thrash/
speed metal and willed
rap-rock into its frustrated existence. (
"Bring the Noise" birthed
Limp Bizkit, but you can't blame
Anthrax and
Public Enemy for that.)
Anthrology is released in conjunction with a reunion of that lineup, as well as a series of live dates and the obligatory live album/DVD chronicle. The two-disc, 30-song set is fully remastered and includes a considerable amount of material from each of four records
Anthrax released during the era. It's kicked off with 1985's
Spreading the Disease --
"A.I.R.," "Lone Justice," "Madhouse," "Enemy," "Armed and Dangerous," "Medusa," and
"Gung Ho." Then it's the classic
Among the Living material, from the title track and
"Caught in a Mosh" to the
Judge Dredd tribute
"I Am the Law" and the righteous
"Indians." Disc one ends with the uncensored version of
rap-metal progenitor
"I'm the Man," still hilarious and pretty damn bold after all these years.
Anthrology's second disc includes two versions of
State of Euphoria's
"Antisocial" -- in English and French -- as well as
"Make Me Laugh" and
"Be All, End All." Persistence of Time is represented by
"Time," "Belly of the Beast," "Keep It in the Family," and
Anthrax's frenzied, elastic
Joe Jackson cover,
"Got the Time," among a few others. The set culminates in the
PE collaboration
"Bring the Noise," the influential song that first appeared on
Attack of the Killer B's in 1991, when
Fred Durst was still a tattoo artist in Jacksonville, FL. ~ Johnny Loftus