Anal Cunt
Anal Cunt, also stylized as AxCx or A.C., was an American grindcore band formed in Newton, Massachusetts, in 1988 by Seth Putnam, who functioned as its leader, vocalist, guitarist, and primary songwriter.[1][2] The band specialized in compositions typically under thirty seconds in length, featuring relentless blast beats, dissonant noise, and lyrics explicitly crafted to provoke through scatological humor, personal attacks on celebrities and subcultures, and unfiltered misanthropy that rejected prevailing norms of acceptability in music and society.[3][4] Putnam, who handled much of the instrumentation across frequent lineup shifts, drove Anal Cunt's output through independent releases on his Wicked Sick Records label, producing albums such as It Just Gets Worse (1992) and Everyone Should Be Killed (1996) that epitomized the band's commitment to deconstructing grindcore's intensity into absurd, anti-art statements.[1][3] Despite—or due to—their embrace of content widely condemned for misogyny, homophobia, and endorsements of taboo ideologies, Anal Cunt cultivated a dedicated underground following within extreme metal circles, influencing subsequent acts in noise and powerviolence genres through their uncompromised emphasis on shock and brevity over musicality.[4][3] The project effectively ceased with Putnam's death from a heart attack on June 11, 2011, at age 43, leaving a legacy defined by intentional offensiveness rather than commercial success or critical acclaim from mainstream outlets.[5][2]History
Formation and Initial Recordings (1988–1992)
Anal Cunt was formed on March 1, 1988, in Newton, Massachusetts, by Seth Putnam, who served as vocalist and guitarist. The original lineup consisted of Putnam alongside guitarist Mike Mahan and drummer Tim Morse, reflecting Putnam's roots in the local hardcore scene and prior noisecore experiments. The band's inception emphasized improvised, anti-musical noise over structured composition, with early rehearsals conducted at Putnam's mother's house to capture raw, chaotic energy.[6][7][3] Initial recordings captured this ethos through ultra-short, lo-fi tracks produced spontaneously without pre-written lyrics or riffs. The 47 Song Demo, recorded in August 1988, spanned just nine minutes across 47 blasts of grindcore noise, distributed informally among peers. This was swiftly followed by the 88 Songs EP later that year, amplifying the format with even more relentless, sub-minute eruptions designed to provoke through volume and absurdity. The 5643 Song EP, released around 1989, escalated the gimmick to thousands of micro-tracks, solidifying their noisecore reputation via cassette and vinyl splits with like-minded acts.[3][8][9] By 1991, lineup flux and touring demands led to releases like Another E.P., issued before the band's inaugural European tour in April, which showcased evolving aggression amid frequent member changes. The Unplugged EP from the same period twisted their formula into acoustic noisecore, maintaining brevity and hostility. These efforts preceded a brief disbandment after the tour, though sporadic activity resumed into 1992, culminating in preparations for their Earache Records debut Everyone Should Be Killed. The early phase highlighted Anal Cunt's commitment to extremity, with recordings often self-produced on rudimentary equipment to prioritize shock over polish.[7][1]Earache Records Era and Expansion (1993–2000)
In 1993, Anal Cunt signed with Earache Records, marking a shift toward wider distribution for their grindcore output.[10] The band's debut full-length album for the label, Everyone Should Be Killed, was released in 1994 following a promotional CD in 1993, featuring Seth Putnam on vocals, John Kozik and Fred Ordonez on guitars, and Tim Morse on drums.[10] This album consisted of ultra-short, noise-driven tracks emphasizing the band's noisecore style.[10] Subsequent releases included the 1995 album Top 40 Hits, recorded with an updated lineup of Putnam on vocals, Paul Kraynak and John Kozik on guitars, and Morse on drums, alongside EPs like Stayin' Alive Oi! Version in 1994.[10] The Earache era saw lineup fluctuations and stylistic experiments, including the 1996 release 40 More Reasons to Hate Us with Putnam handling vocals and guitar, Scott Hull on guitar, and Morse on drums.[10] By 1997, the band issued I Like It When You Die under a new configuration of Putnam on vocals, guitar, and keyboards, Josh Martin on guitar, and Nate Linehan on drums, followed by tours supporting the album alongside acts such as Incantation and Mortician.[10][11] Expansion included side projects like the acoustic Picnic of Love in 1998 on Off the Records and splits with Eyehategod in 1997 and Insult in 1999.[10] The final Earache album, It Just Gets Worse, arrived in 1999 with Putnam, Martin, and Linehan, comprising 72 tracks of brief, abrasive compositions.[10] During this period, Anal Cunt performed at events like the 1993 Relapse Nuclear Festival, contributing to their growing notoriety in underground metal circuits.[12] The partnership ended in 2000, with the label dropping the band amid distribution challenges, leading to reissues of earlier works that year.[10]Reformation and Anniversary Activities (2000–2009)
Following a hiatus marked by Seth Putnam's health issues, including a seizure during a performance at the New England Metal and Hardcore Festival in 2000, Anal Cunt reformed for their 15th anniversary celebrations in March 2003.[3] The original lineup reunited for a series of shows, including a performance at the Tribeca Bar in Manhattan on March 20, 2003.[13] These reunion dates featured early material and emphasized the band's grindcore roots, drawing fans to commemorate the milestone since their 1988 formation.[14] In August 2003, the band attempted a more permanent reformation with Putnam on vocals, Josh Martin on guitar, and Nate Linehan on drums, but Martin departed after a single practice due to scheduling conflicts.[10] Sporadic live activities continued through the mid-2000s, including European performances such as a 2007 show in Finland, maintaining the band's presence in the underground scene without new studio releases during this period. The band's 20th anniversary in 2008 prompted a West Coast U.S. tour featuring the original lineup of Putnam, Mike Mahan, and Scott Kahn, supported by Anal Blast and Infernaeon.[15] [16] Dates included stops in California and other western states in August, focusing on material from their debut album to evoke the early grindcore sound.[17] A special Boston show that year incorporated guest appearances from multiple past guitarists, highlighting the band's evolving lineup history.[18] These activities underscored Anal Cunt's enduring appeal among niche audiences despite limited commercial output.Final Releases and Dissolution (2010–2011)
In late 2010, Anal Cunt released Fuckin' A, an album characterized as a satirical take on cock rock and heavy metal, featuring longer song structures and exaggerated glam influences in contrast to their typical grindcore sound.[19] The record, digitally available from August 10, 2010, included tracks with backing vocals from Seth Putnam's wife, Julie Jett Putnam, and was issued on CD by Patac Records on January 11, 2011.[20] This release marked a deliberate stylistic experiment by the band, diverging from their noise- and grind-oriented catalog to parody 1980s hair metal tropes.[21] Following Fuckin' A, the band returned to their roots with Wearing Out Our Welcome on November 2, 2010, an EP-length collection of eleven short, abrasive grindcore tracks echoing the chaotic brevity of early works like It Just Gets Worse.[22] Released initially in digital format, it was later pressed on vinyl by Limited Appeal in August 2011, comprising material recorded in sessions that emphasized rapid-fire riffs, blast beats, and Putnam's signature misanthropic vocals.[23] These final outputs, produced amid ongoing lineup stability with Josh Martin on guitar and John Morris on drums, represented the band's last original studio efforts before cessation.[24] The band's activities ended abruptly with the death of frontman and founder Seth Putnam from a heart attack on June 11, 2011, at age 43.[5] As Putnam had been the driving creative force since Anal Cunt's inception, driving its reunions, recordings, and performances, no further releases or tours occurred, effectively dissolving the project without formal announcement.[25] Posthumous compilations of earlier material surfaced later, but the core lineup's grindcore iteration concluded with these 2010-2011 outputs.Musical Style
Sonic Characteristics and Influences
Anal Cunt's music exemplifies the extreme fringes of grindcore, characterized by blisteringly fast tempos, minimalistic song structures, and durations typically under 30 seconds per track. Guitars deliver heavily distorted, rudimentary riffs—often relying on open-string power chords or single-note repetition—paired with relentless blast beat drumming that emphasizes speed over complexity. Vocals, delivered by Seth Putnam in a high-pitched, rasping scream, are delivered at breakneck pace, rendering lyrics largely unintelligible in the mix and prioritizing auditory assault over melodic or harmonic development.[26][3] This raw, abrasive sonics eschewed traditional songwriting conventions, embracing dissonance and repetition to evoke chaotic noise.[4] Early output, such as the 1988–1991 demos, leaned heavily into improvisation, featuring unstructured bursts of screeching feedback, random noise bursts, and unscripted vocal eruptions that blurred the line between music and performance art. By the mid-1990s Earache Records era, including albums like Everyone Should Be Killed (1994), the sound coalesced into more deliberate grind patterns while retaining its lo-fi aggression, incorporating occasional breakdowns or mid-tempo shifts for ironic contrast, though brevity remained a hallmark—full-lengths often clocked under 20 minutes with dozens of tracks.[3][27] The band's sonic palette drew from grindcore pioneers' emphasis on velocity and extremity, as seen in Napalm Death's early works, but amplified through Putnam's background in Boston's hardcore and noise scenes. Pre-Anal Cunt projects like Screaming Gore Guts (formed 1985) exposed Putnam to experimental noise, fostering a disregard for musical polish in favor of provocation. Influences also encompassed powerviolence's spastic minimalism—evident in short, violent bursts akin to bands like Infest—and alternative rock's irreverence, which Putnam channeled into parodic deconstructions of genre tropes.[28][3] This synthesis positioned Anal Cunt as a bridge between structured grind and pure sonic terrorism, prioritizing discomfort over accessibility.[29]Lyrical Content and Thematic Intent
Anal Cunt's lyrics predominantly consist of short, vitriolic bursts filled with extreme profanity, slurs, and personal attacks targeting a wide array of individuals and groups, including racial epithets, homophobic invective, misogynistic rants, and derision of vulnerabilities such as disabilities, substance abuse, or family tragedies like child suicide or comas.[30][31] Examples include song titles like "Beating Up Niggers Who Sell Fake Crack," "I Paid Jim Howell to Rape You," and "Your Kid Committed Suicide Because You're a Suck," which encapsulate the raw, confrontational style often structured around the titles themselves to amplify insult through brevity and repetition.[32][31] This content extends to absurd or petty grievances, such as mockery of everyday annoyances like windchimes or athlete's foot, juxtaposed with violent or taboo subjects to underscore misanthropic disdain.[31] The band's thematic intent, as explained by frontman Seth Putnam, centered on universal provocation and antagonism, deliberately offending "all groups of people" without exception to reject selective targeting or political favoritism.[30] Putnam attributed many lyrics to immediate personal frustrations, stating they were written "because we were pissed off at that particular person," while emphasizing a broad "mean and angry" posture against society at large.[30] He framed the approach as a form of boundary-pushing satire intended to mock societal norms and expose perceived absurdities in extreme views, rather than as literal endorsements of hatred, with humor derived from the deliberate ugliness and over-the-top absurdity.[29] This equal-opportunity offensiveness aimed to elicit shock and discomfort, often leading to performance disruptions, as seen when power was cut during a 2011 show mere seconds into a racially charged track.[32] Putnam expressed pride in specific tracks for their structural viciousness, viewing the lyrical extremity as an extension of the band's grindcore ethos of deliberate sonic and thematic repulsion.[31]Controversies
Offensiveness and Censorship Challenges
Anal Cunt's deliberate embrace of extreme provocation through song titles and lyrics—often featuring explicit misogyny, racism, homophobia, antisemitism, and endorsements of violence—generated significant backlash and censorship efforts across labels, venues, and distribution channels. Tracks such as "I Became A Counsellor So I Could Tell Rape Victims They Asked For It," "Kill Women," and "Hitler Was A Sensitive Man" exemplified this approach, with albums like It Just Gets Worse (1999) amplifying criticisms of the content as intentionally inflammatory rather than satirical.[33][34] Earache Records, which released five Anal Cunt albums from Everyone Should Be Killed (1994) to It Just Gets Worse (1999), implemented self-censorship measures to navigate retail constraints, substituting "A.C." for the full band name on sleeves to prevent stock rejections by family-oriented outlets.[35] For It Just Gets Worse, Earache directly censored lyrics deemed excessively offensive, while the UK distributor Vital declined to carry the album altogether due to its content.[36] The label severed ties with the band following rejection of a proposed Hitler-themed record, citing ethical and libel concerns that outweighed potential commercial viability.[35] Live shows compounded these issues, as the band's chaotic performances frequently resulted in venue damage and confrontations. At the 1993 Relapse Nuclear Festival, Anal Cunt was forced off stage early amid widespread destruction.[36] In early 1999, they were banned from London's Mean Fiddler Highbury Garage due to their reputation for inciting disorder.[33] A June 15, 1999, incident at Derby's Victoria Inn saw frontman Seth Putnam allegedly punch and strangle a heckling female audience member, leading Derbyshire Police to pursue contact for behavioral guidance, though no charges materialized.[33] Digital distribution introduced further hurdles, with platforms like iTunes enforcing title censorship via asterisks for profanity-laden song and album names to mitigate perceived offensiveness, even as band names such as Anal Cunt remained uncensored.[37] This policy, attributed partly to filtering glitches, inconsistently applied to extreme metal content but underscored broader efforts to sanitize provocative material for mainstream access.[37]Public Backlash and Legal Issues
Anal Cunt's lyrics and song titles, which often employed hyperbolic profanity and mocked topics including suicide, disabilities, and historical figures like Adolf Hitler, elicited widespread condemnation from music critics, fans, and advocacy groups for perceived endorsements of hate speech and insensitivity. Publications described the band as mining "misogyny, homophobia, [and] racism" to provoke outrage, positioning them as grindcore's most notorious provocateurs with a cult following built on shock value rather than musical merit.[38] This backlash intensified in online communities, where detractors criticized the band's influence on "edgelord" subcultures that amplified offensive humor without contextual irony.[39] Legal concerns arose primarily during the band's tenure with Earache Records, culminating in preemptive alterations to the 1999 album It Just Gets Worse. The label modified several song titles and obscured lyrics in at least two tracks—replacing explicit content with phrases like "anal cunt—FUCKING offensive"—to avert potential defamation or obscenity challenges that could hinder distribution and sales.[35] Earache's founder Digby Pearson characterized this as voluntary "self-censorship" rather than external mandate, aimed at commercial sustainability amid the era's heightened scrutiny of explicit content post-Parental Advisory labeling expansions.[35] No formal lawsuits, performance bans, or arrests directly tied to the band's lyrical output were documented, though the preemptive measures underscored broader industry wariness toward their unfiltered approach.[40]Defenses of Artistic Provocation
Supporters of Anal Cunt's approach, including band leader Seth Putnam, have framed the band's extreme lyrical content as an extension of grindcore's tradition of sonic and thematic extremity, intended to provoke through absurdity rather than endorse literal ideologies. In a 1997 interview, Putnam described the lyrics on the album I Respect Your Feelings as a Woman and a Human as "mean and angry towards all groups of people," emphasizing an "equal opportunity" offense that "badmouthed everybody" without targeting any single demographic preferentially.[30] This perspective positions the provocation as a deliberate satire of societal sensitivities, evolving from the band's origins as a "musical rock n’ roll laugh" with intentionally "horrible" execution to amplify discomfort.[30] Putnam further contextualized terms like "gay" in lyrics—such as in "Recycling Is Gay"—as regional slang common in Massachusetts, not literal homophobia, asserting that "anybody with half a brain" would recognize the hyperbolic intent.[30] Defenders in the underground metal community have echoed this by highlighting Anal Cunt's formation in 1988 as a deliberate joke project, where shock value served as both artistic rebellion against polished music norms and a test of audience tolerance in an genre already defined by aggression.[34] [41] Such arguments portray the band's output as boundary-pushing humor, akin to caricature, rather than sincere advocacy, with Putnam noting that specific tracks arose from personal annoyances rather than broader agendas.[30] Critics of censorship attempts, including Putnam's responses to event cancellations, have reinforced these defenses by dismissing objections as overreactions to perceived slights, such as a 2011 Hellfest permit pull attributed to "racist" labels, which Putnam called "kind of gay" in dismissal.[32] Within grindcore circles, this has been upheld as authentic expression uncompromised by external moralizing, valuing the band's refusal to sanitize content as a commitment to raw, unfiltered provocation that challenges listeners' preconceptions.[42] However, these rationales have been articulated primarily by Putnam and niche enthusiasts, with limited mainstream validation, underscoring the niche appeal of interpreting the material as comedic exaggeration over malice.Reception and Legacy
Critical Assessments
Anal Cunt's music received limited mainstream critical attention, largely confined to underground metal publications and fan-driven review sites, where assessments emphasized the band's deliberate provocation and sonic extremity over conventional artistic merit. Reviewers frequently critiqued the reliance on brevity, noise, and offensiveness as diminishing long-term listenability, with early output dismissed as monotonous noise-rock parody lacking structure or evolution.[3] [43] Mark Prindle's extensive catalog review portrayed the band's initial phase as a "one-joke monkey" fixated on grindcore's most abrasive, tuneless traits, repeated ad nauseam without progression, though later albums like It Just Gets Worse (1996) earned qualified praise for hooky vocal melodies and satirical intent amid the chaos.[3] Sputnikmusic contributors similarly lauded I Like It When You Die (1997) as "essential Anal Cunt," framing its 32 one-to-two-minute tracks as a defiant, world-rejecting statement through unrelenting aggression and thematic irreverence.[44] More formal outlets like Consequence critiqued archival releases such as The Old Testament (2011), acknowledging brief bursts of chaotic energy and ironic humor in demos from 1988–1990 but underscoring overall primitiveness and lack of refinement, with tracks devolving into unstructured blasts that prioritize shock over composition.[27] Decibel Magazine's posthumous reflections on frontman Seth Putnam (died June 11, 2011) highlighted his "questionable values and ideas" balanced by a sharp, irreverent humor, positioning Anal Cunt's legacy as one of notoriety rather than enduring innovation within grindcore.[42] [45] Critics in niche metal forums and zines often debated the band's equal-opportunity offensiveness as either liberating satire or juvenile trolling, with Last Rites noting the "horrible/hilarious" lyrical content and mocking titles as central to their appeal, yet insufficient to elevate the music beyond cult curiosity.[43] This polarization reflects a broader consensus that while Anal Cunt pioneered hyper-aggressive, anti-commercial grind—evident in albums like 40 More Reasons to Hate Us (1996), which blended industrial hardcore with vitriolic brevity—their output prioritized anti-aesthetic rebellion over melodic or technical depth, limiting acclaim to subcultural enthusiasts.[46][38]Cultural Impact and Influence
Anal Cunt exerted influence within the grindcore and extreme metal subcultures primarily through their embrace of irreverence, chaotic brevity, and boundary-pushing provocation, shaping the attitudes and structures of subsequent acts. Scott Hull of Pig Destroyer and Agoraphobic Nosebleed credited the band with introducing "irreverence and danger" to metal and punk scenes, noting their bass-less lineup as a model that influenced formations like Pig Destroyer.[42] Their approach to song titles as standalone jokes—often absurd or inflammatory—encouraged similar humorous titling in hardcore and grindcore bands seeking to blend satire with aggression.[47] The band's legacy underscores a commitment to unfiltered artistic expression amid controversy, with figures like Steve Austin of Today is the Day likening frontman Seth Putnam to comedian Lenny Bruce for fearlessly challenging norms and promoting freedom of thought in music.[42] Albums such as Morbid Florist (1998) were hailed by Philip Anselmo of Pantera as underrated classics exemplifying Putnam's "bizarre, absurd sense of humor," contributing to Anal Cunt's status as underground icons whose raw sound impacted noise and grind genres.[42] Following Putnam's death on June 11, 2011, from a heart attack, the band's unreleased tapes and reissues sustained interest, reinforcing their role in extreme music's mythology of defiance.[48]Post-Disbandment Recognition
Following Seth Putnam's death on June 11, 2011, which effectively ended Anal Cunt's activities, the band garnered tributes from prominent metal musicians acknowledging Putnam's provocative influence on grindcore and extreme music. Philip Anselmo of Pantera, Down, and Superjoint Ritual described Putnam as a "true pioneer of grindcore" and emphasized his unyielding commitment to offensive artistry, stating that Anal Cunt's output represented "the pinnacle of musical terrorism."[49] Decibel Magazine assembled posthumous remembrances from contributors including Tim Morse, Anal Cunt's original drummer, who recounted the band's formative chaotic sessions in 1988, and other metal figures who credited Putnam's relentless misanthropy with pushing genre boundaries.[42] A tribute compilation, Defenders of the Noise: A Tribute to Anal Cunt, was released in November 2013, featuring grindcore and noise acts covering the band's tracks to honor their raw aggression and lyrical extremity.[50] This release underscored the band's enduring appeal among underground practitioners, with participating groups like those in the grindcore scene replicating Anal Cunt's short, abrasive bursts and shock-value themes.[51] Posthumous reissues highlighted sustained collector interest in the band's early output. Relapse Records issued The Old Testament, a two-disc collection of demos and rarities from 1988 to 1991, on November 22, 2011, compiling previously scattered material to document the group's nascent noise-grind experimentation.[52] In June 2023, Italy's F.O.A.D. Records released Early Shit 1988-1991, a six-LP box set with an accompanying book, aggregating demos, rehearsals, and live recordings from the band's inception, which emphasized their proto-grind ferocity before refined production.[53] These efforts reflect a niche archival recognition, driven by fan demand rather than mainstream acclaim, positioning Anal Cunt as a foundational, if polarizing, reference in extreme metal historiography.Band Members
Final Lineup
The final lineup of Anal Cunt, which performed together from 2008 until the band's disbandment following Seth Putnam's death on June 11, 2011, featured Seth Putnam on vocals and guitar, Josh Martin on guitar, and Tim Morse on drums.[54][55] This three-piece configuration marked a return to core elements of the band's history, with Morse rejoining after a 12-year absence to provide the rapid, chaotic drumming characteristic of Anal Cunt's grindcore style.[54] The group undertook tours, including a spring 2009 run with Strong Intention, and appeared at festivals such as Hellfest in June 2011, shortly before Putnam's passing from a heart attack at age 43.[55][12] Seth Putnam (1968–2011), the band's founder and primary creative force since its 1988 inception, served as vocalist and guitarist, delivering the screamed, often indecipherable lyrics over dissonant riffs and noise.[54] His multi-instrumental role emphasized the project's DIY ethos, though health issues including a 2003 heroin overdose had previously sidelined the band. Josh Martin, who had contributed guitar since 1996 (with interruptions), provided additional riffing and backing vocals, contributing to the dual-guitar assault that defined later recordings like Fuck on the Beach (2001) and post-reunion activity.[54] Tim Morse, an original member from 1988 to 1996, resumed drumming duties in 2008, bringing technical speed honed in other projects to support the band's short, abrasive bursts—often under two minutes per track.[54][56] This lineup's tenure produced no new studio albums but focused on live reinforcement of Anal Cunt's reputation for provocation, with performances highlighting the enduring chemistry among its longest-tenured members.[56] Putnam's death effectively ended the band, as no further activity occurred despite Martin's survival until his own passing in 2018.[54]Former Members
Mike Mahan served as the band's initial guitarist from its formation in 1988 until 1991, and returned for recordings and performances from 2001 to 2009 before departing prior to the final lineup.[54] Fred Ordonez played guitar during two stints from 1991 to 1992 and 1992 to 1993, contributing to early demos and EPs.[57] [54] John Kozik handled guitar duties from 1992 to 1995 and briefly in 2003, appearing on releases such as the 1993 album It Just Gets Worse.[54] [58] Paul Kraynak was the guitarist in 1993, participating in select sessions during a period of frequent changes.[54] [58] Scott Hull briefly played guitar in 1995, aligning with the recording of Everyone Should Be Killed.[54] On drums, John Gillis performed from 1996 to 2001, supporting tours and albums like I Like It When You Die amid Tim Morse's initial departure.[54] [1] Nate Linehan took over drums from 2001 to 2003, contributing to mid-period output before another shift.[54] [1] These changes reflected the band's unstable personnel, with Seth Putnam as the sole consistent member handling vocals and occasional guitar across all eras until his death in June 2011.[59] [7] The absence of a permanent bassist was a deliberate stylistic choice, emphasizing raw, minimalistic grindcore production.[34]Contributions and Changes
Anal Cunt experienced frequent lineup changes throughout its existence, characterized by high turnover among guitarists and drummers, while Seth Putnam served as the sole constant member, handling vocals, lyrics, and creative direction from the band's formation in 1988 until his death in 2011.[3][1] Early iterations featured drummer Tim Morse (1988–1997, 2008–2011) and guitarist Mike Mahan (1988–1995), who contributed to the initial lo-fi grindcore noise on demos like the 47 Song Demo and the 88 Song EP, establishing the band's raw, improvised sound.[3] Subsequent shifts included guitarist Fred Ordonez replacing Mahan around 1991–1993, participating in unpolished recordings such as the Unplugged EP, followed by brief stints from John Kozik (1993, on Morbid Florist) and Paul Kraynak (1995, introducing thrash elements to Top 40 Hits).[3][1] By the mid-1990s, Scott Hull briefly played guitar on 40 More Reasons to Hate Us (1996), adding structured riffs before departing after three months, while drummers like Nate Linehan (1997–1999) brought technical precision to albums including I Like It When You Die and It Just Gets Worse.[3] These changes reflected the band's unstable, often humorous ethos, with members cycling due to the demanding and irreverent recording process; Josh Martin stabilized guitar duties from 1997 onward, enhancing musicality on later releases like the 110 Song CD (2008), and John Gillis provided intense blast beats on Defenders of the Hate Code split (2000–2001).[3][1] Overall, Putnam's dominance in songwriting and performance drove the evolution from pure noise to a hybrid of grindcore, punk, and metal influences, with rotating personnel adapting to his vision rather than imposing lasting stylistic shifts.[3]Discography
Studio Albums
Anal Cunt released eight studio albums, primarily through Earache Records, featuring ultra-short tracks blending grindcore with noisecore elements and lyrics designed to provoke offense. These recordings often lasted under 20 minutes total, emphasizing speed, distortion, and absurdity over traditional structure.[1][60]| Title | Release year | Label |
|---|---|---|
| It Just Gets Worse | 1992 | Independent (cassette); Earache (1999 CD reissue) |
| Morbid Florist | 1993 | Relapse Records |
| Everyone Should Be Killed | 1994 | Earache Records |
| Top 40 Hits | 1995 | Earache Records |
| 40 More Reasons to Hate Us | 1996 | Earache Records |
| I Like It When You Die | 1997 | Earache Records |
| Picnic of Love | 1998 | Earache Records |
| Fuckin' A | 1999 (recorded); 2011 (release) | Earache Records / 20 Buck Spin |
EPs and Compilations
Anal Cunt produced a prolific array of extended plays (EPs) and split EPs, primarily during the late 1980s and early 1990s, characterized by ultra-short tracks, abrasive noisecore instrumentation, and limited-run vinyl pressings on underground labels. These releases, often self-produced or issued in quantities under 1,000 copies, captured the band's formative chaotic sound and lineup flux, with Seth Putnam on vocals across most, alongside varying guitarists like Mike Mahan and Fred Ordonez, and drummer Tim Morse. Notable early EPs include the 88 Song E.P. (1989, Wicked Sick Records, 1,012 copies), featuring 88 brief tracks recorded with Mahan on guitar, and the 5643 Song EP (1989, Stridecore Records/T.N.T. & Records, approximately 1,400 copies total across variants), which pushed extremity with thousands of micro-songs, including piano elements by Putnam.[10] Split EPs further exemplified the band's collaborative yet abrasive ethos, such as the 1989 split with 7 Minutes of Nausea (T.N.T. & Records, 1,000 copies) and the 1991 splits with Psycho (Ax/ction Records, 2,000 copies on splatter vinyl) and Meat Shits (Wicked Sick Records, 1,000 copies, reissued 1996 by Fudgeworthy). Later efforts like Unplugged (1991, Psychomania Records, 500 copies) and Defenders of the Hate (2001, Menace to Sobriety Records, 1,000 copies) maintained the format's brevity and irreverence, with the latter's tour edition limited to 200 copies. These EPs, alongside live and demo variants like Live EP (1991, Psychomania, 1,000 copies) and Howard Is Bald (2001 demo, 53 copies), underscored Anal Cunt's DIY punk roots and resistance to mainstream polish.[10] Compilations primarily archived the band's nascent output from 1988–1991, aggregating demo and EP material for retrospective accessibility. The Early Years 1988-1991 (2000, NG Records, 2-CD set) compiled early sessions with original lineups, while The Old Testament 1988-1991 (2011, Relapse Records, 2-CD) expanded on it with remastered tracks and additional content from Putnam, Ordonez, and Morse. The 2023 Early Shit 1988-1991 box set (F.O.A.D. Records, 700 copies across variants including splatter vinyl) offered a comprehensive 6-LP edition with booklet, targeting collectors of the era's raw recordings. Other multi-artist splits functioning as compilations, such as The Master of Noise – Catastrophe 5-way LP (1992, S.O.A. Records, 1,100 copies), included Anal Cunt contributions amid noise peers. These releases preserved material otherwise scattered across obscurities, reflecting the band's enduring cult appeal post-Putnam's death in 2011.[10]| Title | Year | Label | Format/Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| 88 Song E.P. | 1989 | Wicked Sick Records | 7" vinyl, 1,012 copies; reissued 1997 (Fudgeworthy) |
| 5643 Song EP | 1989 | Stridecore/T.N.T. & Records | 7" vinyl, ~1,400 copies (colored variants) |
| Defenders of the Hate | 2001 | Menace to Sobriety Records | 7" vinyl, 1,000 copies + 200 tour edition |
| The Old Testament 1988-1991 | 2011 | Relapse Records | 2-CD compilation of early material |
| Early Shit 1988-1991 | 2023 | F.O.A.D. Records | 6-LP box set, 700 copies (splatter variants) |
Other Releases
Anal Cunt produced several split releases, primarily in 7-inch vinyl format, often featuring short, chaotic tracks aligned with their noisecore style. The band's split with Psycho, released on Ax/ction Records, included contributions from both groups emphasizing grindcore and noise elements.[63] A three-way split with Fear of God and Stench of Corpse compiled tracks from each act, distributed through underground labels focused on extreme metal.[64] Additional splits encompassed collaborations such as with The Raunchous Brothers on a shared EP, highlighting Anal Cunt's involvement in punk and grind scenes during the 1990s.[65] These releases typically featured limited pressings and raw production, reflecting the band's DIY ethos and aversion to mainstream distribution.[66] Early demos, including the 47 Song Demo from 1988, captured the band's formative noisecore experiments with cassette distribution among grind enthusiasts.[67] Live recordings, such as those from Indiana performances, were later compiled in retrospective collections but originated as informal tapes circulated in tape-trading networks.[68]- 47 Song Demo (1988, self-released cassette): Contained 47 improvised noise tracks recorded in basement sessions.[67]
- Anal Cunt / Psycho Split (early 1990s, Ax/ction Records 7"): Featured brief, satirical songs from Anal Cunt side.[63]
- Anal Cunt / Fear of God / Stench of Corpse 3-Way Split (1990s, underground label 7" or cassette): Included one track per band in grind format.[64]
- Anal Cunt / The Raunchous Brothers Split EP (1990s, various labels): Emphasized crossover punk-noise elements.[65]