Racetraitor

Racetraitor is an American hardcore punk band originally from Chicago, Illinois. They released an album called Burn the Idol of the White Messiah on Uprising Records in 1998 and then a split EP called Make Them Talk on Trustkill with Indianapolis band Burn It Down in 1999 before an initial breakup. The band has reformed as of 2016, releasing two EPs featuring new music on Organized Crime Records. Their second full length "2042" was released by Good Fight Music in October 2018.

Racetraitor
OriginChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Genres
Years active1996–1999, 2016–present
Labels
Associated acts
Members
  • Andy Hurley
  • Mani Mostofi
  • Brent Decker
  • Dan Binaei
  • Andrea Black
Past members
  • Karl Hlavinka
  • Eric Bartholomae
  • Pete Wentz
  • Rich Miles

The band's radical take on racial politics made them one of the most controversial groups in the 1990s music scene and gained them recognition from magazines such as Maximumrocknroll and HeartattaCk prior to having any official releases.[1]

History

After the breakup of Chicago band Hinkley, drummer Karl Hlavinka, guitarist Daniel Binaei and bassist Brent Decker formed Racetraitor with new vocalist Mani Mostofi, who had released Hinkley's sole EP. At the time, all four members attended New Trier High School in Winnetka, Illinois. Beginning playing a style similar to powerviolence and grindcore, the band was formed as way to address racial politics. Hlavinka eventually changed roles in the group, beginning to perform as an additional guitarist, leading to the recruitment of Andy Hurley, to take on drum duties. Although Hurley was much younger than the rest of the band, they often referred to him as the groups "secret weapon", due to his technical metal-influenced style of playing. His entrance led to the band altering their songwriting style, leading to their transition into the metalcore genre. However, soon after Decker departed from the group, leading to a number of musicians playing bass in the band for a period of time. In particular, Pete Wentz was a recurring member of the band due to this, however he was never officially the permanent bassist.[2]

During a performance in Columbus, Ohio during this period, the band members criticised members of Anti-Racist Action who were present for only opposing overtly white nationalist groups like the Ku Klux Klan and not deeper issues such as institutional racism. This led to a confrontation between the two groups and eventually a physical altercation.[2]

In 1999, Tacoma, Washington metalcore band Botch released the song "C. Thomas Howell as the 'Soul Man'" on their album We Are the Romans, which was a critique of Racetraitor's confrontational take on race politics and their way of dividing their allies in the anti-racism movement.[2]

Post-breakup

Drummer Andy Hurley became a member of Fall Out Boy alongside occasional Racetraitor fill-in bass player Pete Wentz. Hurley also played drums in several other projects, including Killtheslavemaster and Project Rocket, and was briefly reunited with singer Mani Mostofi in a band called The Kill Pill, who released one record on Uprising before disbanding. Hurley was also a guest drummer on the "Jihad" EP released by the briefly reformed Vegan Reich. In 2016, Hurley joined the band SECT with members of Earth Crisis and Burning Love.

Dan Binaei went on to form Arma Angelus with Pete Wentz and Jay Jancetic (Harm's Way). For a short time it also included Tim McIlrath (Rise Against) on bass, and eventually Andy Hurley on drums. Binaei currently has put together a new experimental rock project entitled Tiger Spirit consisting of previous members of Suicide File, Sweet Cobra, and Nude Celebs.

Bass player Brent Decker continued his activism in the US and abroad before returning to Chicago. Currently, Decker works at Cure Violence out of the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health (Cure Violence stops the spread of violence in communities by using the methods and strategies associated with disease control) and plays in a band called Tiger Spirit.

Mostofi briefly played in a Chicago band called the Enemy that recorded but never released a full length on Indicision Records. When members of the Enemy joined the Rise Against and Shai Hulud, Mani formed the Kill Pill. After the Kill Pill, he went on to complete an MA in Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. He continued his activism in the anti-war and Palestinian rights movements and traveled to the Middle East extensively. More recently, Mostofi earned a JD at Fordham Law School in New York with an emphasis in international law and works as a human rights researcher and advocate.

Eric Bartholomae, who played bass and guitar, spent several years doing activism in Chicago following the breakup of the band. In the fall of 2008, he moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota. Now relocated to Arizona, Eric is currently pursuing a PhD in Exercise and Nutritional Sciences and conducting applied biochemical research related to diet and exercise performance while teaching university classes. Additionally, he holds a black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a brown belt in Judo. He now plays guitar in Vegan Reich.

Wentz went on to form Arma Angelus with Binaei, who released one full-length album on Eulogy Recordings and an EP on the label Happy Couples Never Last.

Lastly, Karl Hlavinka left Racetraitor in 1997, eventually joining the Pittsburgh band Creation is Crucifixion. He later left Creation is Crucifixion, returning to play on and off with Racetraitor until the band's breakup in 1999, after which he went on to form the aforementioned Killtheslavemaster with Hurley.

Reunion

Since Racetraitor's break up there have been occasional reunion rumors, but nothing ever materialized. In 2016, however, the band announced on its Facebook page that they were in the process of re-mixing "Burn the Idol" for a re-release on vinyl. In August 2016, the band announced its first show in 17 years with Detroit hardcore band Earthmover.

In September 2016, the group went on to release two brand new songs: "By the Time I Get to Pennsylvania" and "Damaged".[3] All music is available at the band's bandcamp page.

“We had discussed playing a show or doing something else over the years, but nostalgia was never all that motivating, so the idea died,” explained Hurley in September 2016. “But with everything happening in the past couple of years, from the way things heated up in Ferguson, Missouri, to the rise in xenophobia and bigotry reflected by the popularity of Donald Trump, making new music with Racetraitor felt important again. We needed to respond to this moment in history in our own way.”[4]

In July 2017, Carry the Weight Records, from the United Kingdom, released reissue Burn the Idol of the White Messiah. The record was remixed by Dallas Thomas from the Chicago band Pelican. The same month Organized Crime Records released a new EP from the Racetraitor called Invisible Battles Against Invisible Fortresses.

Racetraitor announced they signed to Good Fight Music in October 2018, releasing their second full length "2042" with lead single "BLK XMAS." The second press of the Burn the Idol of the White Messiah reissue was also released on Good Fight in partnership with Ugly and Proud Records from Bulgaria.

Characteristics

Musical style

Early Racetraitor music could be characterized as powerviolence and grindcore, featuring an abundance of noise and blast beats. Songs often timed less than a minute, which gave their early shows the quality of containing more spoken word than music. Eventually, their 1990s hardcore, extreme metal, especially death metal, and metalcore influences came to the foreground and Racetraitor's songs became longer and more defined. Along with bands like Abnegation and Day of Suffering, Racetraitor because one of the forerunners of the vegan metal sound and an early pioneer of metalcore.

Influences

The band cites their influences as: 108, Deicide, Los Crudos, Groundwork, Public Enemy, Unbroken, Suffocation, Downcast, Sepultura, Acme, Pantera, Ressurrection, Propagandhi, Quicksand, Metallica, KRS-One, Lauryn Hill, Ottawa, Neurosis, Anthrax, Minor Threat, The Misfits, Meshuggah, Man is the Bastard, Union of Uranus, Arrested Development, Spitboy, and Bolt Thrower.

Political Message

Racetraitor's message centered around anti-racism and anti-colonialism. They often discussed issues like white privilege, class privilege, the war on drugs and biases in the US criminal justice system, inequities in economic globalization, and US foreign policies in Latin American and the Middle East. The name Racetraitor was in reference to using one's social and economic privilege to create a more egalitarian world. The idea was to take the pejorative term "race traitor" used by white American racists and the band claim it as a positive self-chosen label. The band's message also held that "race" was an artificial and constructed human category and was a social construct devised to facilitate exploitation and oppression. Their radical beliefs were influenced by black nationalism, third worldism and other anti-colonial ideologies (and for some members, eventually, Islam). Their lyrics also touched on topics of sexual abuse, spirituality, corporate dominance of economic and public life, rugged individualism. The band's members were vegan and lived the straight edge lifestyle.

Especially in the early days of the band, Racetraitor consciously took a more confrontational approach to spreading its message for and ideas about such social justice. They would often challenge their (mostly white) audiences to recognize the roles that everyone played in perpetuating racial, sociocultural, economic, and colonial oppression. The band became known for calling their own audience members "crackers", which they explained as people who "crack the whip"; not necessarily someone who is Caucasian, in other words, but rather those who simply perpetuate racism and exploitation in their day-to-day lives. According to members of Racetraitor, this "in-your-face" approach was intentionally designed to shock audiences and force a debate on issues such individuals might otherwise have totally ignored. After both the release of their first record and starting to garner considerable attention across the American hardcore scene, Racetraitor's message and means of communication gradually evolved to become much less confrontational in its style and instead took something of a more motivational form.

In the press

Racetraitor has been featured on the covers of both Maximumrocknroll and HeartattaCk.

Racetraitor has been featured in the books Burning Fight: The Nineties Hardcore Revolution in Ethics, Politics, Spirit, and Sound by Brian Peterson (ISBN 978-1889703022), Sober Living for the Revolution: Hardcore Punk, Straight Edge, and Radical Politics by Gabriel Kuhn (ISBN 978-1-60486-051-1) and New Wave of American Heavy Metal by Garry Sharpe-Young (ISBN 978-0958268400).

Members

Current members

  • Mani Mostofi – lead vocals
  • Andrea Black – guitar
  • Daniel Binaei – guitar
  • Brent Decker – bass
  • Andrew Hurley – drums

Former members

  • Eric Bartholomae – guitar
  • Karl Hlavinka – guitar, drums (initially)
  • Pete Wentz – bass
  • Rich Miles – ?

Discography

  • Burn the Idol of the White Messiah (Uprising Records, 1998)
  • Make Them Talk split EP (Trustkill with vinyl released on Goodlife Records, 1999)
  • By the Time I Get to Pennsylvania EP (Organized Crime Records, 2016)
  • Continuing the tradition Demo (recorded in 1996, released by Contraband Media in 2016)
  • Burn the Idol of the White Messiah: remix and remaster (Carry the Weight Records / Contraband Media, 2017)
  • Invisible Battles Against Invisible Fortresses EP (Organized Crime Records, 2017)
  • 2042 (Good Fight Music, 2018)

Compilations

  • The Great Age Of Enlightenment? (Hit The Ground Running and A-Team Records, 1998)
  • Ya Basta! Benefit For Food For Chiapas (PowderKeg, 1998)
  • Straight Edge: Rise of a New Era (Break Out Records, 1999)

References

  1. Kamiński, Karol. "RACETRAITOR announce new LP; comment on classic debut LP". Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  2. Welch, Ben. Fall Out Boy - Our Lawyer Made Us Change The Name of This Book So We Wouldn't Get Sued.
  3. Adams, Gregory (September 27, 2016). "Fall Out Boy Drummer Andy Hurley's Racetraitor Return with Comeback Single". Exclaim!. Archived from the original on September 29, 2016. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
  4. "Racetraitor release new music, announce reunion show". Lambgoat. September 27, 2016. Archived from the original on October 2, 2016. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
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