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RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE
Live at the Grand Olympic Auditorium
(Epic)
No one ever changed the world hawking tapes out of the trunk of their car. That was Rage Against the Machine's escape hatch from hard-line grassroots idealists, their unspoken justification for accepting a corporate bankroll to peddle anticorporate principles. Was a difference made? Sure, although Rage's posthumous political influence pales compared to their deep footprints on the metal and hip-hop landscape. Face it, screaming "Fuck you, I won't do what you tell me!!!" in the pit doesn't necessarily translate to Googling Howard Zinn in the campus library the next morning. Ironically, this Los Angeles swan song went down nearly a year to the day before 9/11, a time when an assured, established renegade voice was desperately needed on the radio. It's a passable greatest-hits run-through, made substantially less vital by the obvious stagnancy of the players, who went on to plumb new, inane depths in Audioslave. Hindsight reveals that frontman Zack de la Rocha was the flaming battery acid driving the Machine. Barely able to contain his passion and/or venom in "Testify" and "Know Your Enemy," his spastic poetry afforded credibility for the stormtrooping, overfunked rhythm section and perfectly book-ended Morello's infamous, once-astonishing solos. Thuggish backup vocals courtesy of Cypress Hill dilute Olympic's ferocity, and it's worth noting that set/career ender "Freedom," Rage's first and most beloved call-to-arms, doesn't even end with the incoherent wailing and crippling feedback of the album version. A sadly fitting end for a cabal of wealthy, bright rebels that pulled back too many knockout punches. A.B.
PAUL RUCKER
History of an Apology
(Jackson Street)
The apology in question was issued by President Clinton in 1997 to victims of the notorious Tuskegee Experiment, in which black men suffering from syphilis were left untreated so that government researchers could track the gruesome progress of the disease. Responding to that woeful chapter in U.S. history, and with funding from King County, bassist Paul Rucker has composed a stirring, mournful suite, his large ensemble of Seattle musicians carrying themselves with elegiac dignity that aims to inspire and overcome, not rage and react. It's political music at its best (and, at 42 minutes, unmarred by the excess that this kind of grant-funded project can sometimes engender). The six tunes that form the bulk of the disc all cycle around an odd-metered vamp, with Rucker lumbering along the earthy bottom, Bill Horist adding gorgeous webs and filigrees of looped, processed guitar, drummer Jacques Willis subtly, insistently driving the groove. Over 16 months of recording, more than a dozen Northwest players stopped by Rucker's studio/bedroom to make their contributionsJay Roulston, Michael White, Elizabeth Pupo-Walker, Julian Priester, and others (including a typically invaluable two-cents from Bill Frisell). Rucker then layered the sounds into a soul-baring, multilevel procession richly imbued with bass clarinet, accordion, flute, and other textures, and with consistently evocative just-right soloing from Roulston, trombonist Jeff Hay, Jovino Santos Neto, and more. There's a pure sense of vision here and a nobility of spirit that responds better to the tragedy of Tuskegee than any shrill rage, or apology. MARK D. FEFER