Rage Against The Machine

Outspoken firebrands and activists Rage Against The Machine educated masses of heavy music fans by injecting their bombastic Molotov cocktail of rap, hardcore punk, funk, and metal with a sobering dose of fiercely polemical, politically charged urgency.

Crashing the mainstream in 1992 with "Killing In The Name" - their sonic protest against police brutality and systemic racism - the band planted their flag in the scene with their triple-platinum debut, 'Rage Against The Machine', which courted controversy with its graphic cover of a protesting, self-immolated Buddhist monk.