Anthrax Lyrics — by Popularity
449 songs · Page 2 of 9
| 51 | Born Again Idiot |
| 52 | Auf Wiedersehen |
| 53 | Random Acts Of Senseless Violence |
| 54 | Efilnikufesin |
| 55 | (Efilnikufesin) N.F.L |
| 56 | Cadillac Rock Box |
| 57 | Superhero |
| 58 | Perpetual Motion |
| 59 | Refuse to Be Denied |
| 60 | Taking the Music Back |
| 61 | We've Come For You All |
| 62 | I'm the Man (Def Uncensored Version) |
| 63 | Nfb (Dallabnikufesin) |
| 64 | Make Me Laugh |
| 65 | Grunt & Click |
| 66 | 1000 Points Of Hate |
| 67 | Blood |
| 68 | God Save the Queen |
| 69 | King Size |
| 70 | Invisible |
| 71 | Potters Field |
| 72 | Schism |
| 73 | Sects |
| 74 | Ball Of Confusion |
| 75 | Black Dahlia |
| 76 | Death from Above |
| 77 | In A Zone |
| 78 | Pipeline |
| 79 | Big Fat |
| 80 | Gridlock |
| 81 | Soldiers of Metal |
| 82 | Bare |
| 83 | NFL (Efilnikufesin) |
| 84 | Harms Way |
| 85 | Crush |
| 86 | Potter's Field |
| 87 | Belly Of The Beast (Live) |
| 88 | Discharge |
| 89 | Riding Shotgun |
| 90 | Ball Of Confusion (That's What The World Is Today) |
| 91 | Giving The Horns (Japanese Bonus Track) |
| 92 | Bring Tha Noize (with Public Enemy) |
| 93 | Harm's Way |
| 94 | Piss 'N Vinegar |
| 95 | 604 |
| 96 | Contact |
| 97 | Hymn 1 |
| 98 | Raise Hell |
| 99 | Packaged Rebellion |
| 100 | Tester |
Anthrax Albums
About Anthrax
Anthrax is an American thrash metal band formed in New York in 1981 who helped define the genre alongside Metallica, Slayer, and Megadeth as part of the "Big Four" of thrash metal. Their breakthrough album "Among the Living" (1987) showcased their signature blend of lightning-fast riffs, social commentary, and Scott Ian's percussive rhythm guitar style on classics like "Caught in a Mosh" and "Indians." The band pioneered the crossover between metal and hip-hop with their collaboration with Public Enemy on "Bring the Noise," while albums like "Sound of White Noise" demonstrated their ability to evolve with grunge-era sensibilities. Anthrax's infectious energy, comic book-inspired imagery, and willingness to experiment helped bring thrash metal to mainstream audiences while maintaining their underground credibility.