


One of the band’s earliest hits, “Killing in the Name,” features only a few lines that are repeated throughout the song’s five-minute duration. Since their touring days, Rage Against the Machine has actively contributed to social justice efforts through charitable performances, protests, and attention-grabbing lyrics that expose social injustices including police brutality, homophobia, and fascism. Beyond songwriting, Rage Against the Machine has also taken an active role in political movements for social justice and used their music and popularity as a weapon of protest.įormed in Los Angeles in 1991, Rage Against the Machine consists of guitarist Tom Morello, vocalist Zack de la Rocha, drummer Brad Wilk, and bassist Tim Commerford. Casting incendiary lyrics against a backdrop of inventive instrumentals, Rage addresses social and political issues that are as prevalent today as they were at the band’s inception in 1992.

Such dramatic scenes are common for Rage Against the Machine, a band known for its unique, genre-blending sound that combines rock, hip-hop, and heavy metal. Drawing a crowd of hundreds that eventually forced the New York Stock Exchange to shut down, Rage Against the Machine defied threats of arrest and rushed the steps of the trade center in an act of protest to shoot their music video directed by activist Michael Moore. “Sleep Now In The Fire” depicts how the American Dream has morphed into a nightmare about a money-loving culture obsessed with climbing a social and economic ladder. The smug, grinning face of former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani bobs his head back and forth in the opening frames of Rage Against the Machine’s “Sleep Now In The Fire” music video, a song that fires bullets at the dehumanizing political machine that keeps millions of Americans in poverty by economic segregation and wealth inequality.
