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Bottled AngerRage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello pours forth the vitriolBy David HolthousePublished on September 26, 1996Tom Morello, 31: a leftist radical with a seven-digit savings balance. A Harvard graduate (1986, with honors) who plays guitar for a platinum-selling band with hit songs that advocate class warfare. A reformed metalhead who was born in Harlem. A public supporter of both Amnesty International and the Shining Path, a group of Peruvian Marxist guerrillas notorious for its human-rights violations. A musician, and man, of intriguing contradictions--and heavily armored convictions. It's in his blood. Morello's father was Kenya's first ambassador to the United Nations. Before that, he was a member of the Mau Mau uprising that put a bloody end to British colonial rule in the east African country. Morello's parents divorced when he was 1, and his mother, a white schoolteacher, took him with her to Libertyville, a small town outside Chicago (Mary Morello has since founded Parents for Rock and Rap, an anticensorship counterweight to Tipper Gore's PMRC). After he left the Ivy League, Tom Morello moved to Southern California, where he took a day job in the office of former senator Alan Cranston (later censured as a member of the Keating Five) and started working his way into the SoCal music scene. Five years later, Rage Against the Machine played its first gig at a house party in Orange County. Basically, the band grafted the Black Sabbath sensibilities Morello picked up as a teenager in the Illinois suburbs onto the hybrid sound of hard-core/hip-hop then just coming into vogue in Southern California. Seething over that surface, vocalist Zack de la Rocha chanted and howled radical leftist protest raps. Rage caught rep fast, and despite the band's railings against corporate America--or perhaps precisely because of them--Epic Records signed the band and released its self-titled debut in 1992. Rage Against the Machine went platinum in America, Canada, France and the U.K., and gold in several other countries. And then the waiting began. Four years would pass before the group released a second album. During that period, de la Rocha dropped out of sight several times to visit the Zapatista rebels in southern Mexico. In 1995, Epic rented the group a house in Atlanta, where the members holed up to try to write a new album. It didn't work--personal and creative conflicts pushed the band to the verge of self-destruction. By all appearances, however, the band is now back on track, with a highly successful sophomore recording (Evil Empire), an appearance at the high-profile Free Tibet concert in San Francisco last month, and reportedly one of the hottest road shows of the season, now on tour with Girls Against Boys. New Times recently contacted Morello in Los Angeles, where he had a few days to burn between Rage Against the Machine's headline spot at the Redding Festival in England and the start of its U.S. tour. We were supposed to have 45 minutes with Mr. Morello. His publicist gave us 20. New Times: There have been several Tom Morello sightings on Mill Avenue. What's up with that? Tom Morello: Well, my girlfriend's from Tempe, so we go out there and stay with her mom every once in a while. And I like to walk Mill, see what all the kids are up to, get something to drink, go to the bookstore. The usual Mill stuff. The last time we were there was not too long ago, I think in mid-August. NT: Did you check out any local bands? NT: So far, Rage has been an election-year band for releasing albums [Rage Against the Machine in 1992 and Evil Empire this year]. Any chance a third record will come out before the year 2000? TM: I really don't know. NT: Okay. Obvious question--who are you going to vote for in November? NT: Where are they? NT: At what?
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