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Album Review

Rush released after the late-2000 split between Zack de la Rocha and the rest of Rage Against the Machine, the covers album Renegades salutes the band's musical and philosophical roots, ranging from the old-school Bronx to the hard-rockin' Motor City to protest-central Greenwich Village to gangsta-ridden L.A. As could be expected, the set works best when the group focuses on material from its most recent forebears: rappers and hardcore bands. Indeed, Renegades begins with a pair of powerful hip-hop covers — Eric B & Rakim's "Microphone Fiend" and Volume 10's "Pistol Grip Pump" — that spotlight Rage's immense strengths: Tom Morello's clean, heavy riffing and vocalist de la Rocha's finely tuned spray of vitriol, just this side of self-righteous. Another hip-hop blast (and the one closest to home), Cypress Hill's "How I Could Just Kill a Man," is even more devastating, an easy pick for the highlight of the album. Listeners familiar with the originals, however, may have trouble with Rage's covers of EPMD's "I'm Housin'," the Stones' "Street Fighting Man," and Dylan's "Maggie's Farm," a trio of original versions whose anger and emotion were conveyed more in the lyrics than the performances. Still, drummer Brad Wilk sets an appropriately frenetic hardcore tempo for the excellent version of Minor Threat's "In My Eyes," and de la Rocha stretches out well on the MC5's "Kick Out the Jams." With just a bare few excepions, Renegades works well, in part because Rage Against the Machine is both smart enough to change very little and talented enough to make the songs its own.

Customer Reviews

RAGE.

to that guy who said he started liking rage through gh2, WTF? how have you never even heard or heard of rage before? theyre called one of the best bands in the world. not oh they were in guitar hero. hahahhah but in all seriousness: buy this album. idc how you heard of RAGE, if you like them buy ALL of their cds i personally prefer battle of los angeles, but key RAGE songs= know your enemy, bulls on parade, wake up, sleep now in the fire, and ashes in the fall. buy those 5 and youll be hooked. i guarantee that.

Let's get one thing straight

I myself am not one for cover albums, even though this one sounds pretty good. I'm only writing this as a response to the douchebag that said he was glad someone shot Dimebag. I listen to Pantera and Rage and that sure as hell doesn't make me a racist, neo-nazi, facist or anything else you wanna try and throw at me. It just makes me a guy who likes to listen to good music. So Pantera uses the southern flag in some of their merch. It doesn't make them racist. Dime would have never hated anyone because of thier color or ethnicity. (I love how you are too ignorant to realize that you're spreading just as much hate with your biased accusations based on nothing but your own stupidity). I don't know what kind of messages you're getting out of Rage's songs, but I thought one of the things they were AGAINST was the unlawful killing of innocent people. F*ck off you hypocritical scum.

yay

no poop

Biography

Formed: 1991 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

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...
Full Bio

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