Fifteen Years Later: Rage Against the Machine's The Battle of Los Angeles Rages On

Rage Against the Machine was poised to take the reigns of rock when the band delivered The Battle of Los Angeles on November 2, 1999. Their third studio album burned with unbridled rebellion fueled by Zack de la Rocha's radical rhymes and Tom Morello's experimental mastery on guitar. The vanguard of rebel rock belonged to Rage Against the Machine when the effort sold 420,000 copies in the first week, claiming the top spot on the charts.

In a world tormented by injustice, The Battle of Los Angeles feels as urgent now as it did when first unleashed.

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The 12-track album arrived on the first Tuesday of November back in 1999. There was no coincidence in releasing it on what's traditionally observed as Election Day in the United States. The 2000 election season was already in gear, with Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore setting up to spar as front runners when Rage Against the Machine struck first.

De la Rocha, who went to University High School in Irvine, served up a searing critique on “Guerrilla Radio,” the album's first single: A silent play in the shadow of power / A spectacle monopolized / The camera's eyes on choice disguised / Was it cast for the mass who burn and toil? / Or for the vultures who thirst for blood and oil?

Morello cranked out a blistering guitar solo that sounded more like the work of a deranged harmonica before bringing the song to its riff-rocking crescendo of “All hell can't stop us now!” The opening salvo in The Battle of Los Angeles had been fired.

When looking back at Rage Against the Machine's finest album, the political climate it arrived in can't be ignored. The Zapatista rebellion in the Mexican state of Chiapas that heavily influenced de la Rocha's politics continued into its fifth year. President Bill Clinton oversaw the deregulation of Wall Street that would have severe consequences in the decade to come. Devastating sanctions continued against Iraq. A simmering rebellion against corporate globalization struck with the Battle of Seattle just a few weeks after the band's release.

The pulse of protest can be felt throughout. De la Rocha melded the old with the new in his most poignant song writing on record. The imprint of socialist journalist and novelist George Orwell echoes as Rage's front man seethed “Who controls the past now controls the future / Who controls the present now controls the past,” on the tone-setting “Testify.” His storytelling on “Maria” was accentuated by the brilliant bass lines of Irvinite Tim Commerford and Brad Wilk's timely drumming. “Ashes in the Fall” proved that The Battle of Los Angeles was also a sonic revolution advancing the boundaries of rock-rap.

Read more: What to Look for in Rage Against the Machine's 20th Anniversary Box Set

The tragedy of Rage Against the Machine's finest hour is that it turned out to be its final one. The prophecy of its album title came true nearly a year after its release. The band took to the stage for a fierce performance outside the Democratic National Convention in August 2000. The Los Angeles Police Department pulled the plugged after the show and got projectile happy with protesters. The band broke up soon after, never to regain its momentum nor deliver a follow up of original material. The moment couldn't have come at a more unfortunate time with the darkness of the Bush administration looming on the horizon.

The Battle of Los Angeles's anniversary arrives at the eve of another Election Day. Its incendiary songs still brim with fervor because so little has changed since its release. Mumia Abu-Jamal remains imprisoned. Striking revelations about NSA government spying illuminate de la Rocha's Orwell-inspired rhymes anew. The Great Recession sparked attention to the growing gap between rich and poor that Rage decried when shutting down Wall Street before it ever got “occupied” during the Michael Moore directed video shoot for “Sleep Now in the Fire.”

“What better place than here?” Zack de la Rocha timelessly asked 15 years ago. “What better time than now?”

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