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'Rage' Supergroup Emerges in Tense U.S. Election Year

Members of two bands long known for their strong political messages, Rage Against the Machine and Public Enemy, have come together for a new supergroup in a charged U.S. election year.

Calling themselves Prophets of Rage, the new act debuted with a small concert Tuesday evening in Los Angeles and promised an update Friday on additional plans.

"We can no longer stand on the sidelines of history. Dangerous times demand dangerous songs. It's time to take the power back," Prophets of Rage announced on a newly created website, in a likely allusion to the upcoming election in which billionaire Donald Trump is the Republican Party's presumptive presidential nominee.

The group features Chuck D, the frontman of New York hip-hop greats Public Enemy whose hard-hitting verse about the African American experience brought a political sophistication to rap starting in the late 1980s.

The new group reunites guitarist Tom Morello, bassist Tim Commerford and drummer Brad Wilk of Rage Against the Machine, one of the most political bands ever to win mainstream success in the United States, infusing hard guitar rock with leftist, anti-capitalist lyricism.

Prophets of Rage also features lead rapper B-Real of Cypress Hill, one of the first prominent Latino hip-hop groups.

While not as brazenly political as Rage Against the Machine or Public Enemy, Cypress Hill has been outspoken in its push for legalization of marijuana.

The band's first concert, at the historic 500-capacity Whisky a Go Go in West Hollywood, was tilted toward Rage Against the Machine songs, according to set-lists posted online by concert goers.

The show ended with two of Rage Against the Machine's best-known songs, "Bulls on Parade" and "Killing in the Name," as well as a mash-up of Public Enemy's classic "Fight the Power" with the Beastie Boys' energetic "No Sleep Till Brooklyn."

Prophets of Rage announced the show only hours before, restricting sales to ticket-buyers who showed up in person to avoid scalpers.

The group said it was donating proceeds from the show to a group fighting homelessness.

Notably absent from the supergroup is Rage Against the Machine singer Zack de la Rocha, the group's lyricist whose politics were inspired in part by the revolutionary background of his Mexican grandfather.

Rage Against the Machine broke up in 2000 but has played periodic shows since, including a 2008 protest gig on the sidelines of the Republican Party's convention. The last full reunion was in 2011.

Prophets of Rage, while strikingly similar as a name to Rage Against the Machine, was the title of a song on Public Enemy's seminal 1988 album "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back."

Source: Agence France Presse


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