Rage Against the Machine
Fact Sheet
| Musical genre: | Alternative, Rock, Metal |
| Country | USA |
| Years active | 1991- |
- Zack de la Rocha - vocals
- Tom Morello - guitars
- Brad Wilk - drums
- Tim Commerford - bass
The band's musical signatures were de la Rocha's distinctive, rap-influenced vocal style (influenced mostly from Chuck D. of Public Enemy) and Morello's experimentation with guitar sounds, and fans particularly admired their powerful live performances. They toured with many other significant bands, including U2 and the Wu-Tang Clan.
The band released three studio albums of original material, Rage Against the Machine (1992), Evil Empire (1996) and The Battle of Los Angeles (1999). There was also a covers album, Renegades (2000), an album of live and rare material fittingly titled Live & Rare (1997), several singles, and three videos, Rage Against the Machine (1997), The Battle of Mexico City (2001), and Live at the Grand Olympic Auditorium (2003).
Zack de la Rocha left the band between the release of The Battle of Los Angeles and the release of Renegades, though the latter features his vocals. The band officially split up not long afterwards. Zack de la Rocha is believed to be working on new material in the hip-hop arena; the remaining members of the band recruited ex-Soundgarden singer Chris Cornell as vocalist and are working as a new group under the name Audioslave. The first Audioslave single, Cochise, was released by early November 2002, and the first album followed. According to a Spin magazine interview with de la Rocha, he has recorded several tracks with various artists, among them DJ Shadow. There is currently no information on when de la Rocha's solo album will be released, but in 2003 a song called "March of Death" that he recorded with DJ Shadow was released in protest of the war on Iraq.
Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, radio conglomerate Clear Channel Communications sent out of a list of 150 songs that were recommended to be pulled from airplay. All songs by the group were ordered as off limits. Clear Channel owns and operates hundreds of stations, and employed DJs who did not comply with its censorship would have been replaced.
