Released January 1984 Length 35:33 Release date January 1984 | Recorded Late 1983 Label Banzai Records | |
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Fistful of Metal(1984) Similar Anthrax albums, Thrash metal albums |
Anthrax fistful of metal full album uk vinyl rip
Fistful of Metal is the debut studio album by American thrash metal band Anthrax, released in January 1984 by Megaforce Records in the US and Music for Nations internationally. It includes a cover of Alice Cooper's "I'm Eighteen" which is the only Anthrax recording guitarist Scott Ian did not participate in, as he refused to play the song in protest to the management decision to have the song on the album. This is the band's only album to feature frontman Neil Turbin and bassist Dan Lilker, who were replaced by Joey Belladonna and Frank Bello respectively.
Contents
- Anthrax fistful of metal full album uk vinyl rip
- Anthrax fistful of metal full album 1984
- Background
- Release
- Critical reception
- Personnel
- Anthrax
- Production
- Songs
- References
Anthrax fistful of metal full album 1984
Background
Schoolmates Danny Lilker and Scott Ian formed Anthrax in 1981 in New York City. They both played guitar, but eventually Lilker switched to bass after they could not find a suitable bassist. After some lineup rotations, Anthrax settled on lead guitarist Dan Spitz, vocalist Neil Turbin and drummer Charlie Benante by 1983. Anthrax recorded a five-track demo in early 1983, which led the band signing with Jon Zazula's Megaforce Records. The label issued a seven-inch single of "Soldiers of Metal / Howling Furies", which sold 3,000 copies in two weeks. Fistful of Metal was recorded in Pyramid Sound Studios in Ithaca, New York and produced by Carl Canedy, drummer in The Rods. The album was released in January 1984 by Megaforce in the US, Music for Nations in the UK, and Roadrunner in Europe.
However, shortly after the release of Fistful of Metal, Lilker was fired by Turbin because the former was "too tall". The band, at Ian and Benante's insistence, hired Charlie's nephew, Frank Bello, as Lilker's replacement. Turbin had contributed song ideas, lyrics, titles and arrangements to most songs on the album, as well as three songs from the second album Spreading the Disease, but Ian and Benante, who played guitar in addition to drums, felt they needed tighter control on the songwriting. Due to a songwriting partnership between Ian and Benante, with Ian writing the lyrics and Benante the music, Turbin was expelled from the band. Music journalist Eddie Trunk stated: "Early on, I told Jon Zazula that what I didn't like about Anthrax was singer Neil Turbin's vocals." He admits in his writing to pressuring Zazula and Anthrax into firing Turbin from the band. The band did not rehire Lilker when given the opportunity, but Lilker did rehearse with his new band at the time Nuclear Assault within a month of his release from the band at the same leased rehearsal room as Anthrax in Yonkers, New York.
Release
Fistful of Metal was released in January 1984. It was released as a double album by Music for Nations in the UK, featuring extra mixes of "Soldiers of Metal" and "Howling Furies", which were not included on the US edition. Megaforce repackaged a compilation of Fistful of Metal and the 1985 extended play Armed and Dangerous in 2005, which featured a different artwork and some liner notes, but excluded any new mixes and bonus tracks. Commemorating its 25th anniversary, Megaforce reissued the album on three colored 10-inch LPs, also including Armed and Dangerous.
Critical reception
Fistful of Metal was well received by critics. Xavier Russel of Kerrang! called it a great debut album, with songs played "at a hundred miles an hour" which could just have been "slightly more original." Writing in the Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Colin Larkin called the cover art "tasteless", but commended the album's small, but steady commercial performance. AllMusic's Steve Huey said Anthrax has not found its distinctive style yet, sounding more like a Judas Priest cover band. Huey found the lyrics utilizing heavy metal stereotypes and opined fans would find the record "off-putting". Canadian journalist Martin Popoff praised the well-produced sound and the "almost operatic anti-thrash vocals" from Turbin, considering the album responsible for "putting New York back on the US metal map, and quality back in the books of bruising and uncompromising underground metal." The term thrash metal was used for the first time in the music press by Kerrang! journalist Malcolm Dome, referring to the song "Metal Thrashing Mad".
Personnel
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.
Anthrax
Production
Songs
1Deathrider3:10
2Metal Thrashing Mad2:42
3I’m Eighteen4:02