| snuh ( @ 2007-01-22 05:15:00 |
the return of rage against the machine

Readers of this blog know I have two loves - politics and music. When you combine both together, you have something special. The best way to get ideas through thick skulls is to slip some knowledge in via song. Even after four decades, Woody Guthrie's music is still played. People tend to remember something when it's been attached to a melody, just like how they teach toddlers the ABCs by singing each letter.
A special band just reunited for the Coachella Festival - Rage Against the Machine. They lasted nine years, only put out out four albums during their career and have been MIA for seven. I think it's a perfect time for their return, I feel the break was good for them. One of the better quotes I've read about any band was an LA Times reporter asking a Rage Against The Machine fan why he enjoyed them so much. He replied, "Zack de la Rocha vocals sound like he's really mad and means what he sings about." High compliment, indeed.
Rage Against the Machine will reunite for Coachella
Biography: Rage Against the Machine
YouTube: Rage Against The Machine: Testify
Rage Against the Machine: Sleep Now In The Fire - 4.70MB
Rage Against the Machine: Renegades Of Funk - 4.20MB
Rage Against the Machine: People Of The Sun - 5.73MB

Readers of this blog know I have two loves - politics and music. When you combine both together, you have something special. The best way to get ideas through thick skulls is to slip some knowledge in via song. Even after four decades, Woody Guthrie's music is still played. People tend to remember something when it's been attached to a melody, just like how they teach toddlers the ABCs by singing each letter.
A special band just reunited for the Coachella Festival - Rage Against the Machine. They lasted nine years, only put out out four albums during their career and have been MIA for seven. I think it's a perfect time for their return, I feel the break was good for them. One of the better quotes I've read about any band was an LA Times reporter asking a Rage Against The Machine fan why he enjoyed them so much. He replied, "Zack de la Rocha vocals sound like he's really mad and means what he sings about." High compliment, indeed.
Rage Against the Machine will reunite for Coachella
Rage Against the Machine, the seminal L.A. band that made heavy music into political manifesto, will reunite after a seven-year lull for one show as the headliners at the 2007 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival.
Sources say Rage, which played the main stage at the first Coachella in 1999, will be joined by other familiar faces for the eighth edition of the festival, which covers three days this year and begins April 27: Red Hot Chili Peppers, which headlined in 2003, are back, as is Björk, who topped the bill in 2002.
Biography: Rage Against the Machine
Rage Against the Machine earned acclaim from disenfranchised fans (and not insignificant derision from critics) for their bombastic, fiercely polemical music, which brewed sloganeering leftist rants against corporate America, cultural imperialism, and government oppression into a Molotov cocktail of punk, hip-hop, and thrash. Rage formed in Los Angeles in the early '90s out of the wreckage of a number of local groups: vocalist Zack de la Rocha (the son of Chicano political artist Beto) emerged from the bands Headstance, Farside, and Inside Out; guitarist Tom Morello (the nephew of Jomo Kenyatta, the first Kenyan president) originated in Lock Up; and drummer Brad Wilk played with future Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder. Rounded out by bassist Tim Bob (aka Tim C., born Tim Commerford), a childhood friend of de la Rocha's, Rage debuted in 1992 with a self-released, self-titled 12-song cassette featuring the song "Bullet in the Head," which became a hit when reissued as a single later in the year.
The tape won the band a deal with Epic, and their leap to the majors did not go unnoticed by detractors, who questioned the revolutionary integrity of Rage Against the Machine's decision to align itself with the label's parent company, media behemoth Sony. Undeterred, the quartet emerged in late 1992 with their eponymous official debut, which scored the hits "Killing in the Name" and "Bombtrack." After touring with Lollapalooza and declaring their support of groups like FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting), Rock for Choice, and Refuse & Resist, Rage spent a reportedly tumultuous four years working on their follow-up; despite rumors of a breakup, they returned in 1996 with Evil Empire, which entered the U.S. album charts at number one and scored a hit single with "Bulls on Parade." During 1997, the group joined forces with hip-hop supergroup the Wu-Tang Clan for a summer tour and remained active in support of various leftist political causes, including a controversial 1999 benefit concert for death-row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal. The Battle of Los Angeles followed later in 1999, also debuting at number one and going double platinum by the following summer. In early 2000, de la Rocha announced plans for a solo project, and the band performed an incendiary show outside the Democratic National Convention in August. The following month, bassist Commerford was arrested for disorderly conduct at MTV's Video Music Awards following his bizarre disruption of a Limp Bizkit acceptance speech, in which he climbed to the top of a 15-foot set piece and rocked back and forth.
YouTube: Rage Against The Machine: Testify
Rage Against the Machine: Sleep Now In The Fire - 4.70MB
Rage Against the Machine: Renegades Of Funk - 4.20MB
Rage Against the Machine: People Of The Sun - 5.73MB