Monthly Archives: October 2014

Reflecting on Twenty Years of Rage Against the Machine

 

The Front Cover of the 2012 Release

The Front Cover of the 2012 Release

If you don’t take action now
We settle for nothing later
We’ll settle for nothing now
And we’ll settle for nothing later!

I found Rage Against the Machine’s debut album, 20th anniversary version at my local music store (I understand it came out in 2012). I bought it, immediately,

I was first introduced to RAM(Rage Against the Machine) on MTV, watching the video for Freedom, it had to be the early 90’s. Something struck me. It wasn’t just that the lead singer was screaming but the way he incorporated the scream into the song. It wasn’t random, it grew, and it grew from nothing to deafening. And it wasn’t baseless, it had purpose, literal outcry. The video and song tell the story of the Federal Raid of the Pine Ridge Reservation in the early 70’s, and though it would be 20 years after the release the song the video would become the core of a Thanksgiving Sermon.

Rage Against the Machine Back Cover 2012

Rage Against the Machine Back Cover 2012

One of the reasons I love Rage Against the Machine is that they go further than simple social commentary but send a call to action. It would be years after their initial release and the beginnings of my work as a minister that would bring them to the forefront of my listening life. Rage Against the Machine remind me that the winners control history, and if we are to fight marginalization we may have to embrace basic principles of anarchy. I myself am not an anarchist, I appreciate order, I just get frustrated when that order is skewed so far to the white that oligarchs use crisis as fuel to control the population. If the poor and middle class are pitted against one another, by class, race, gender, religion, or freedom (yeah right) then the top 1% are free to function without question, at least without real question.

There used to be a word in English, accountability. Now when the corporate oligarchs do something unethical they are called before bought men and instead of being brought to justice they are given tribute. They are too big to fail, but down here in Mississippi, we are too small to survive. I am reminded every day that Mississippi is run by stewards, stewards bought and paid for by the Corporate Oligarchy. Before the Civil War Mississippi had one of the highest GDP’s in all of the United States, money made off the backs of slaves. If you visit Natchez you can still go to the site of the biggest auction block in the country. Cemented in the ground are shackles and chains that had been lost to the elements and buried until a work crew found them and cemented them into a large concrete block in the ground.

But sadly as I grew up the injustice didn’t register. I grew up religious, I am religious today but it doesn’t look like it used to. I have learned that to be moral I must also be active. It is Rage Against the Machine that drives me downtown for a march, or a rally. It is Rage Against the Machine that forces me to vote, it is Rage Against the Machine that makes me value justice, even when justice bring me discomfort and pain. I often find myself sitting in rooms full of men and women whose names were recorded on secret Sovereignty Commission lists in Mississippi that date back to 1956, those who were vocal those who fought against the machine that grew strange fruit.

LP Art

LP Art

The cover of this album has a Vietnamese Monk burning himself in protest, asking only for religious freedom. RAM reminds us of the cost of activism, the cost of standing for right. It was a religious man on the cover, I am a religious man, I was raised in a faith that called death the ultimate sacrifice but the right one when facing injustice. I don’t know if I have that courage, but it is a courage that has passed through many leaders of the past: Jesus Christ, Martin Luther King Jr, Malcom X, Medgar Evers, Mahatma Gandhi, Michael Servetus, John F Kennedy.

I may sound bitter as you read this, but it really isn’t bitterness, it is shame. I live in Mississippi, white privilege helps me on a day to day basis. It is privilege I grew up with. In fact, it was so much a part of my White and Male privilege that I didn’t catch it. I never really noticed my bias’s, toward people of different color, different gender, and religion. I know that even while listening to Rage that I am part of the Machine. I made a lot of changes but change is slow. I sit frequently in rooms with leaders fighting for equality, whether it’s race, gender, orientation, or labor. I try to face rage with peace. I am a pacifist, there is enough violence, there is enough death, without adding anything to it, but even peacefully we can rage against the machine.  I know I stand on the shoulders of all those who came before me and I know that what I reap is what I sow.

Rage Against the Machine Spinning

Rage Against the Machine Spinning

Considering Beck’s Morning Phase

 

Beck: Morning Phase

Beck: Morning Phase

One of my last purchases from my local record store before closing its doors was Beck’s Morning Phase. The conversation went something like this:

Me:        How is this new Beck album?
Him:       It’s cool, it’s not like his older albums.
Me:        Should I get it?
Him:       Beck isn’t very good at reissuing albums, don’t worry it’s a solid album.
Me:        OK

I tell this story for two reasons. First, as an example why it’s important to have a local record store, the shop keepers help us find music we probably wouldn’t otherwise buy. And second, it really is an amazing album.

I will never forget the first time I listened to this Beck album, I had to work very hard to keep an open mind. I had to work so hard because this album sounded nothing like Mellow Gold or Odelay, and if we know anything it’s that Beck fans love Mellow Gold and Odelay. I couldn’t figure out what happened to Beck, so I actually looked on the internet to see if there are two Beck’s. Well I found out there weren’t, I also found out that he had a few albums  before this one, specifically one called Sea Change, people loved it, and it was of similar style. In fact this album was a companion to that one.

Beck: Morning Phase

Beck: Morning Phase

I tried to figure out what I was missing so I listened to this album over and over again. Oh I said I liked it but I really wasn’t sure, I just didn’t want to be that guy who gave up on artists in their later years. Of course if I really wanted to blame someone for being shocked by his changing style I really have to blame myself. I have to blame myself for one simple reason, I got caught up in the idea that all good music was released while I was in high school or college. I swore up and down that would never happen, but, it did. It was my fault because I stopped listening after Odelay.

After a week of solid listening I decided I was trying to force it so I let it go. Then I wanted to listen to the album and I was looking to see if I could find Sea Change.

Beck Looking Through a Hole

Beck Looking Through a Hole

Like all good artists Beck changed, some reviewers pointed out that this was because the world didn’t. He had always seen the problematic establishment, but was now dealing with the idea that it wasn’t changing and he wondered if there was a point. I don’t know whether Beck was feeling that or not, but I know I understand that idea. I get it, I look into the mirror and my beard is becoming grayer every day, silly me I had just assumed I would be a little wiser by this time in my life. Don’t get me wrong I feel like I earned the gray through stress, but if I could at least feel like I was learning something.

Sometimes I walk to my record player and want to listen to something, and when I don’t know what it is that I want to listen to I play Morning Phase. Not because there is nothing to listen to, but it has become a soundtrack for my personal mental noise. If I can’t sleep and I can’t figure out why, Morning Phase helps bring to the surface the block. I don’t know if Beck sat down to write and album that became a tool to calibrate my sanity but he did and I thank him for it.

I have considered writing about this album for months but always felt like I needed to understand it better. The album doesn’t always make sense to me, but then I remember neither did Mellow Gold.