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Rage Against the Machine
Users Say
132 ratings
Album Reviews: 5
Album: Rage Against the Machine
Artist: Rage Against the Machine
Release Date: 11/3/1992
Genre: Rock/Pop
Tags: hip hop, rap., funk-rock, rap-metal

The first album to successfully merge the amazingly disparate sounds of rap and heavy metal, Rage Against the Machine's self-titled debut was groundbreaking enough when it was released, and many would argue that its importance and influence remains unchallenged and unsurpassed to this day. The... [+] Expand

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Rage Against the Machine by Rage Against the Machine!

Recent User Reviews

Relentless in their anger, Rage Against The Machine comes out barrels blazing, leaving nothing behind in their wake.
FULL REVIEW
posted Apr 19, 2006
Rage Against the Machine's self-titled debut was a modern-music masterpiece. It would take some time for the album to be fully realized, but it's impact on music was huge, and Rage's place in music is of the same callibre.
FULL REVIEW
posted Mar 22, 2006
A Classic
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posted Jun 29, 2005
Good stuff.
FULL REVIEW
posted Jan 17, 2007
Embrace the anger
FULL REVIEW
posted Feb 25, 2007

Critic's Review

4.5 out of 5 stars Ed Rivadavia, All Music Guide
The first album to successfully merge the amazingly disparate sounds of rap and heavy metal, Rage Against the Machine's self-titled debut was groundbreaking enough when it was released, and many would argue that its importance and influence remains unchallenged and unsurpassed to this day. The living embodiment of this culture clash, guitar wizard Tom Morello fuses his roots in '80s metal-style shredding with an unprecedented array of six-string acrobatics and rhythmic special effects, most of which no one has even tried to imitate. And from vocalist Zack de la Rocha, the group receives the meaningful rhymes and emotionally charged delivery that white-boy metal could never hope to achieve. Still, despite the unique elements upon which they are built, songs like "Bombtrack," "Take the Power Back," and "Know Your Enemy" are immediately memorable, surprisingly straightforward slabs of hard rock. And one need not look further than the main riff of the venomous "Wake Up" -- lifted straight out of Zeppelin's "Kashmir" -- for conclusive proof of Morello's influences. Even more impressive is the group's talent for injecting slowly mounting tension into such highlights as "Settle for Nothing" and "Bullet in the Head," both of which finally explode with awesome power and rage. In contrast, the band manages to convey their message with even more urgency through stubborn repetition, as seen on "Freedom" and their signature track, "Killing in the Name." With its relentlessly rebellious mantra of, "F*ck you, I won't do what you tell me," the song is a rallying cry of frightening proportions and the unequivocal climax of their vision. A stunning debut that remains absolutely essential.
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