After 2 Years of Silent COVID Compliance, Rage Against the Machine Returns
So much for “fuck you, I won’t do what you tell me.”

After two years of pandemic protocols, precautions, and prohibitions, Rage Against the Machine finally took the stage in Washington, D.C., for a long-anticipated, much-delayed reunion tour to shout fuck you, I won't do what you tell me.
At back-to-back concerts in a packed Capital One Arena, rock's most radical band reinforced just how enduring its musical appeal is while adding a layer of awkward irony to the ideological project that runs through its lyrics.
Filling up a 20,000-person arena in a city where COVID fears still have people wearing masks outside is no mean feat—particularly when the cheapest tickets cost just under $200. It's doubly impressive for a band that hasn't released a full-length album of original material this century.
Rage's Tuesday night show provided ample evidence for why people turned out. It was a tight, energetic performance one might have expected of a band half its age. The lack of new material didn't matter much to an audience eager to rap along to well-worn classics like "Take the Power Back," "Know Your Enemy," and "Testify."
But if its music and performance have managed to stay fresh, Rage's message can't help but feel rather stale and ordinary, given how politics has shaken out since its heyday—and particularly over the past couple years that its reunion tour has been delayed.
The lyrical themes of Rage Against the Machine are a whirlwind of historical references and contemporary 1990s polemics—a merger of old-school hippie paranoia about the security state ("Hoover, he was a body remover") with fresher attacks on an American-led post–Cold War order ("NAFTA comin' with tha new disaster").
Tying it all together is a rejection of "the system" itself as racist, exploitative, and inherently oppressive ("some of those that work forces are the same that burn crosses"). Its broadsides against the FBI and U.S. foreign policy will easily resonate with libertarians. The attacks against consumerism and free trade won't.
Viewed in the context of the decade in which the band was made, there was something refreshingly fun and nonpartisan about these attacks on a "machine" whose oppressive nature didn't change all that much from Ronald Reagan to Bill Clinton.
But keeping this all fresh and distinctive has been a challenge. That's partly because many of Rage's once radical ideas have become basically mainstream.
Attacking globalization was a little bolder in the 1990s when Democrats and Republicans were largely supported it. Rage guitarist Tom Morello's headlining of the 2016 "Rock against the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership)" tour was less courageous when one considers that Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump both also came out against that modest free trade agreement.
Similarly, the band provoked cheers when it flashed an "abort the Supreme Court" text on a massive screen at Tuesday's D.C. show. One likely could have gotten the same message by turning on MSNBC.
The fading distinctiveness of Rage's brand of politics is less disappointing than the band's failure to apply its message of radical nonconformity to the issue of the past two years.
The COVID-19 pandemic has been one long series of the machine telling people what to do, from staying inside and social distancing, to wearing masks, to getting vaccinated. Rage Against the Machine has been conspicuously silent about all that.
I'm not aware of any band members going so far as to endorse lockdowns or other pandemic measures. Morello seemed to criticize mandates in 2020 when responding on Twitter to the hilarious rumor that the band would help President Joe Biden promote mask wearing and social distancing. But he was also incredibly dismissive of the idea that anyone would do anything but listen to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and isolate themselves.
It's possible for radical leftists to think COVID-19 restrictions were a prudent, effective means of controlling a deadly virus. Perhaps the system got that one right. But if it can be trusted to largely call pandemic policy correctly, what's left of the radical critique that the machine's very existence is intolerable exploitation? If we can trust the man to implement a stay-at-home order, do we really need the revolution?
It's a question a lot of the radical left in America have been struggling to answer throughout the pandemic. Their basic approach to COVID-19 was not all that different from the elite consensus of paying people to stay home and wait out the virus. The original anti-lockdown protests were an almost exclusively right-wing affair. And when leftists did dispense with pandemic protocols during the George Floyd protests of summer 2020, mainstream liberals largely nodded in agreement.
It's a similar story with rock music generally. Except for some old fogies with a history of right-wing politicking (like Eric Clapton), once rebellious musicians seem to have largely accepted pandemic restrictions that made so much of their industry illegal. Even when the fans were ready to ditch their masks, some performers demanded the crowds keep them on.
If radical left-wing politics and rock music have both largely accepted the COVID-19 security state, I suppose it shouldn't be too surprising that the band that's best fused both has as well. It doesn't make its music any less amazing, even if it does deflate the seriousness of its message.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
>>rock's most radical band
Morello is the band without the music the message was vanilla ... Zack(h?) was a stereotype
I disagree. Morello has been around and there's plenty of objective evidence to support that he's good, he alone does not compose any sort of magic sauce. I mean, and I absolutely don't mean to speak of ZDLR as any sort of transcendental talent either, but when your failed supergroup breaks up and B-Real and Chuck-D say they were just keeping Zach's seat warm, it should be a pretty clear indication that Morello wasn't the sole ingredient to a/the success.
Moreover, socially, he's every bit the stereotype that ZDLR or Eddie Vedder or any one of a hundred other leftist rock retards are.
oh, socially absolutely. the screen background of Morello's solo tour was like watching msnbc but I can ignore it and listen to the guitar.
loved Chuck D, love Morello, was always pretty bored by Zach ... if he stood there by himself and ranted with no band I'd give him a bottle of water and drive off at the green light
I don't know if that's Chuck D being polite, or if he really meant it, but I'm willing to say that it's not even fucking close between Chuck D and ZDLR. He's not a good rapper while Chuck D is an all-time great.
Again, I don't mean to pick favorites. I just mean purely as a sort of acognizant, (pseudo-) multi-factor analysis. I think Chris Cornell is/was clearly a better vocalist too. Maybe B-Real, Chuck D, and Morello were so good together that it made people's bones hurt and that's why people didn't show up and/or buy albums. Maybe Chuck D doesn't bring the global political messaging bullshit that ZDLR brings and doesn't want to bring some/all of that message. I'm just saying it's clear that Morello wasn't the single ingredient to success and seemingly, some combination of Morello + vocals and/or Morello + vocals + rap (even crappy rap) was.
Chuck D is more radically to the left than Zack de la Rocha, and a raging fucking anti-white black nationalist racist to boot. Sometimes I wonder if you retards are fucking deaf.
I made 17,000 dollars in just 5 weeks working part time right from my apartment. When I lost my last business I got tired right away and luckily I found this job online and with that I am able to start reaping lots right through my house. Anyone can achieve this top level career and make more money online by:-
Reading this article.>> http://oldprofits.blogspot.com
Sometimes I wonder if you retards are fucking deaf.
Well, even if we're deaf, we aren't so retarded we can't read. I didn't say Chuck D wasn't leftist or more or less leftist than ZDLR. I didn't even say the word 'left'. I don't even think left has anything specific to do with the difference in appeal. I think it's the (pseudo-)intellectualism; ZDLR appeals more to the NPR-listening audience with somewhat niche and broad references to historical political conflict and pop culture (Vietnam, Paine, La Zapatista, Robert Indiana-esque cover art, etc.) in a way that Chuck D specifically wouldn't and may even consider it degrading to appeal to.
But I'm sure Chuck D will be really impressed that you got your feewings huwt on his behalf.
"Chuck D is more radically to the left than Zack de la Rocha, and a raging fucking anti-white black nationalist racist to boot. Sometimes I wonder if you retards are fucking deaf."
Are you paid, or just a random asshole?
The last time I gave a shit about what Chuck D said was when he posted 18 Reasons Why Tupac Shakur Isn’t Dead. Needless to say he hasn’t been relevant since the mid 90’s.
rock's most radical band
To me, they always came off as the music kids would listen to as they pretended to be rebellious just before they had to be home for dinner. And it turned out that the band members fit the mold perfectly.
Shilling in the name of
+1
Perfect description. And it also perfectly fits me and the many kids at my suburban high school that listened to them in the 90s and thought we were "rebelling." Ahhhh, the good ol' days of youthful ignorance and narcissism.
This is the best description of Rage that I have ever heard.
Limousine Liberals
Tim Pool's "Rage On Behalf of the Machine" is an inspired take on these clowns.
If you were a true libertarian you would have simply said "Rage is still a bunch of leftists, and true libertarians don't let themselves be entertained by leftists."
the Morello solo tour in 2019 was a great show
Zzzzz
If you were a true lover of contradiction, you'd point out that they were rich rock stars on a major label screaming about The Machine.
They've always been faux-rebels selling a message that is able to be sold to angry teenagers. Which, to be fair, is what a lot of punk is.
I'm a rebel (but not against my record label or tour promoters, and not against the government when it tells me to shut down).
I'd have had tons more respect if they'd held popup concerts and dared the government to come get them.
As it is, they are like most "radicals" whose only real desire is to be on the other end of the leash.
So van Morrison?
My politics don't inform my musical choices. If it did, I might only have 5 albums in my collection.
^ This
Jonny cash folsum prison
All misfits albums
Half the Ramones albums
Kool MOe dee
And weird AL?
Look at sarcasmic completely miss the point of the article so he can troll.
He's a dog that just can't let go of it's one shtick.
That $0.50 is not going to earn itself.
Poor sarc.
Why would true libertarians not allow themselves to be entertained by leftists?
Musta been those Trumpistas calling out RATM for their rank hypocrisy 22 years ago too, right you fucking clown?
The "no true Libertarian" argument. Classic.
Nope.
I know I've heard thier music before - just never on purpose.
Fuck you I won't do what you tell me
Now do forced speech for non-binary gender pronouns.
Jordan Peterson is the new Rage against the Machine.
What a surprise! Far left progressive rock bad is a cuck for government control. And in other news, rain is wet.
They’re just progtard bitches. Fuck them and their music.
I will also argue that they kind of suck. That they've always kind of sucked.
There ya go BUCS, that’s how it’s done. Lol.
And you are correct. They suck.
You say these things to hurt me
try Dead Kennedys. East Bay Ray is easily as good on axe and Jello Biafra's lyrics are entirely more hilarious social darts than Zach's
Christian prefers ethnicky jazz to parade his snazz.
Rage can't hold a candle to the Dead Kennedys.
unique within a genre.
try Dead Kennedys. East Bay Ray is easily as good on axe and Jello Biafra's lyrics are entirely more hilarious social darts than Zach's
^ x 1000
I never want to hurt you. I want you to grow stronger. So, I guess listen to Havok.
"Fuck you if you don't do what they tell you"
I chuckled
I've been saying this for years. They're more like "fuck me, I'll do what they tell me" these days. Well, as long as it's the authoritarian leftists doing the telling...
+1 absolutely correct. Their real desire is to be on the other end of the leash telling us all how to live. When you hear Morello in interviews, you know instantly he's an arrogant authoritarian cunt.
They’re fucking commies.
Yes, but "Killing in the Name" is a very libertarian song.
IMO, pretty much all of their songs contain some ~20-50% of content that a libertarian could wholly sympathize with, the problem is frequently the other 50% of the song, much like Reason today, they go completely off the rails with their extrapolation. 'Bulls On Parade' is similar. The parts where it's clear what the message is, it's clearly libertarian (anti-war, anti-MIC, pro-free speech). The parts where it's less clear what the message is, the rest of the context strongly implies that they're against people defending their families whether those people approve of a/the war or not.
A listing of libertarian-themed songs by SJW artists would be quite long.
Many “Libertarians” think that the absence of state coercion means a great increase in individual freedoms. That’s the same error communists are making
In reality, a libertarian society is one in which private constraints are far more limiting than government constraints ever were. Libertarian societies end up being quite conservative.
It's really not, you retarded fuck heads just heard "Fuck you I won't do what you tell me" and skipped the entire rest of the song, which consists entirely of accusing wypipo of all being KKK members 20 years before it became the mainstream Democratic Party position. The entire song is a fucking comically bad race hustle culminating in the only part your tiny little pea sized fucking brain picked up on. If you're going to ride Zack's nuts over his libertarian songwriting, at least pick something like Bulls On Parade that calls out censorship, mass incarceration and the military industrial complex alongside the race hustling.
Aww... somebody's sad that Chuck D doesn't love him enough, ZDLR isn't race-baiting enough for his tastes, or both.
Always were.
Still produced good music for revolutionary energy, just ignore the specific prescriptions.
To be fair, so are many self proclaimed libertarians, even if they don’t realize it.
Lol. Keep simping dickhead.
Some of those who use sauces
Are the same the burned sausage
GRILLIN' IN THE NAME OF
fuck you I won't eat what you tell me.
Those with fries are justified
I have never to my knowledge met a cross burner in the work forces. I’m sure it’s a huge problem to RATM tho.
It’s called speaking truth to power, yo. Haha.
Nothing quite says "rage against the machine" like a concert for the DC elite where the prices START at $200.
Two of them!
It's possible for radical leftists to think COVID-19 restrictions were a prudent, effective means of controlling a deadly virus.
It's impossible for them to think otherwise.
Do we really need another band spewing the bullshit philosophies of dead European white men?
This whole article almost feels like half of a pact between a pot and a kettle to call each other black to obfuscate that they're both boiling frogs. First, how rich of Reason of all places to criticize someone else for a lackluster lockdown response. Second, the criticism is that their stale because of COVID and not the rest of the bullshit in the last 5 yrs. that practically followed their 90s-era prescriptions to a 'T' and gone completely off the rails/to shit?
RATM - 1992: Wake Up!
Twitter - 2013: #BlackLivesMatter
Obama Zombies - 2013: We're woke!
Oxford English Dictionary - 2017: We're woke too!
FedGov 2020: Lock down.
Seattle 2020: CHAZ
BLM 2020: Mostly peaceful.
Kyle Rittenhouse 2020: *Actually* rally around your community with a pocket full of shells instead!
And to beat my own 2 cent drum, dump several articles in the last 72 hours calling for more, bigger, but arguably slightly more efficient major government action.
Yeah, there's plenty of epilogue and room plenty of story arcs.
RATM - 1992: (To white people) Wake Up!
Ketanji Brown-Jackson - 2021: I'm so woke I don't even know what a woman is!
RATM - 1996: They rally around the family with a pocket full of shells!
Record numbers of black, white, brown, yellow, red, gay, straight, male, female, other first time gun buyers in 2021: With all the people raging against all these machines, that sounds like a good idea!
But you meant Reason swapping bodily fluids with RATM while Biden auspiciously bamboozles both of them by signing more EOs of dubious constitutionality.
EOUSes... Executive Orders of Unusual Size.
rock's most radical band
*barf*
You're doing God's work, Barfman.
This band is boring.
I considered going to one of their concerts - mainly to see RTJ - but then I realized that going to a RATM concert is effectively the same thing as the old ladies that go to see Wayne Newton.
Hey, it doesn't stop sarcasmic from getting shitfaced and trying to start a pit with the other AARP members at a Ministry concert.
Rage Became the Machine.
These guys have been raging FOR the machine for a long time. Millionaire Bolsheviks and the worst kind of Bolsheviks.
I had the opportunity to go a show last week with someone from my old company for free, in the company box. I found it amusing to "take the power back" while sitting in an expensive corporate box. As a 1990's teen listened to RATM during their peak, I found it overall enjoyable. I chuckled when they canceled the shows 2 years in a row. Really fighting back against the system!
During the show when they flashed the "Abort the Supreme Court" message, it was disappointing that they went woke with using the term "birthing people" instead of women. I was surprised that was the only real controversial thing during the whole show. The rest was just the music, very little talk.
What a weird article.
What’s pathetic is that it takes freakin’ Van Morrison to actually come out and rage against this shit. And “where have all the rebels gone?” is about this exact deafening silence from all those maverick renegades in the music biz.
On a related note, I’m actually glad so many legends passed from the scene by 2016 before the wokeness and compliance took over. It’d break my heart to hear a Lemmy or a Bowie potentially drinking the kool aid.
Scratch a "progressive" and there's an authoritarian just under the surface. I'm ashamed that I didn't fully understand this until 2020.
As a former Nuclear Biological and Chemical NCO at Ft Bragg, NC I can TRUTHFULLY tell you that YOU CANNOT VACCINATE against a BIOLOGICAL AGENT which COVID-19 IS! Yes, it probably started out as a "natural" pathogen much like Anthrax and Racine do but once the Chinese Communist Government put it in the lab at Wuhan and manipulated it in a lab setting then it was NO LONGER NATURAL. What was even WORSE was they INTENTIONALLY RELEASED this bio agent against their own people NOT KNOWING the ramifications of what they had done to this virus.
Now you CAN TREAT the pathogen once you KNOW WHICH STRAND you have been exposed to but VACCINATE IS A NO GO! That is why those who have been "vaccinated" and "boosted" are still coming down with it. This is NOT A VIRUS like small pox or measles or typhoid. The Department of Defense tried to "vaccinate" us against Anthrax but all they did was put 12 shots of poison in us.
Tell Dr. Frankenfauci and his coconspirators that we are not listening to their Jim Jones Kool Aid lies anymore!
That’sa whole bunch of nonsense.
The band is just a bunch of boring, ignorant leftists who have never grow outgrown their teenage emotions. They are about as authentic and “against the machine” as Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.
"...One likely could have gotten the same message by turning on MSNBC..."
For entirely too long, "edgy" humor in SF consisted entirely of G. W. Bush jokes; it's now Trump jokes.
"If we can trust the man to implement a stay-at-home order, do we really need the revolution?"
Ha! Brilliant!!
This is one of the best Reason articles that I've read in years. Fantastic. Very well written. One thing though, Rage was always clearly fake and shallow. When they first became popular, they seemed to be trying to mimic real punk bands but they were always a cheap imitation.
Though I always sort of appreciated Rage’s tone and intentions, the funny and bottom line thing is that, despite their “rage against the machine,” if the politics they advocated ever came to be realized, the machine would be so much bigger and more intrusive and oppressive and deadly than it was at the time when they wrote all those cool songs. That’s how fucking stupid the left are. But they also rocked. Go figure.
Rage with the Machine.
Spacemen 3
Revolution
Reason could have written an article about any number of artist outside the main gatekeeping apparatus of the mainstream music industry which warpa.all it touches into what rage against the machine has become. But I guess that's cool, rage against the machine needed more time and clicks and not anything actually subversive to government interest and current gatekeeper cultural pushes.