Racetraitor

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Racetraitor
Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genre(s) Metalcore
Years active 1995–1999
Label(s) Good Life Recordings
Uprising Records
Trustkill Records

Racetraitor (1995-1999) was a political straight edge metalcore band from Chicago, Illinois who managed to get on the covers of both Maximum Rock N' Roll and HeartattaCk before releasing a note of music. Known for calling audience members "crackers" and for espousing radical beliefs influenced by black nationalism, third worldism and other anti-colonial ideologies (and for some members, eventually, Islam). Their lyrical content revolved around issues of privilege, Western dominance of the Third World and inequalities in globalization. Additionally the band addressed issues pertaining to constructions of sexuality in America, corporate dominance of economic and public life, veganism and the straight edge lifestyle. 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 claim it as a positive self-chosen label. The band's message also held that "race" was an artificial and constructed human category. They released an album called Burn the Idol of the White Messiah on Uprising Records and then a split EP called Make Them Talk on Trustkill with their friends in the Indianapolis band Burn It Down. The band were also followers of Fred Hampton Jr and encouraged their fans to write to him, visit him in prison, and raise money for his legal defense.

Early on Racetraitor’s music could be characterized as power violence, 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 extreme metal and metalcore influences came to the foreground and Racetraitor's songs became longer and more defined.

[edit] Post-breakup

Drummer Andy Hurley is now 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.

Dan Binaei went on to form Arma Angelus with Pete Wentz (Fall Out Boy) and Jay Jancetic (Holy Roman Empire). For a short time it also included Tim McIlrath (Rise Against) on bass, and eventually Andy Hurley (Fall Out Boy) on drums. Dan Binaei currently has put together a new experimental rock project entitled L.A. Kings consisting of previous members of Not Enough Gold, Nude Celebs, and Def Choice.

Bass player Brent Decker continued his activism in the US and abroad before returning to Chicago.

After the Kill Pill, Mani went to complete an MS in Microbiology at NYU. He's currently working on a book entitled Generation Y: It's All You.

[edit] Other members

Eric Bartholomae, who played bass and second guitar, spent roughly four years doing animal and eco activism in Chicago following the breakup of the band. In the fall of 2003 he moved to Minneapolis, MN. He has since put together a new musical projected called Willoughby.

Pete Wentz, a regular fill-in live member of Racetraitor, formed Arma Angelus with Binaei, who released one full-length album on Happy Couples. After that band's dissolution, Wentz formed Fall Out Boy, who released an album and a split EP on Uprising before signing to Fueled By Ramen/Island Records.

[edit] External links