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Amy MacDonald Music

Renegades

Renegades


Other Views:
Artist: Rage Against The Machine
Label: Epic
Category: Music

List Price: £8.99
Buy New: £5.97
You Save: £3.02 (34%)



New (25) Used (6) from £3.44

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 22 reviews
Sales Rank: 1589

Format: Explicit Lyrics
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 5099749992122
ASIN: B000050ZDO

Release Date: December 9, 2002
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Microphone fiend
  • Pistol grip pump
  • Kick out the jam
  • Renegades of funk
  • Beautiful world
  • I'm housin'
  • In my eyes
  • How could I just kill a man
  • The ghost of Tom Joad
  • Down on the street
  • Street fighting man
  • Maggies farm

Similar Items:

  • Evil Empire
  • The Battle of Los Angeles
  • Rage Against the Machine
  • Rage Against the Machine/Evil Empire/the Battle of Los Angeles
  • Live at the Grand Olympic Auditorium

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Produced by rock-rap supremo Rick Rubin, Rage Against The Machine's Renegades contains a series of cover versions whose selection seems as considered as the band's politics. And there, in part, lies the problem. Among the downright obvious there are moments of pure inspiration. They are on safest ground when rehashing hip-hop for the mosh pit: Eric B and Rakim's "Microphone Fiend", EPMD's "Housin'" and Cypress Hill's "How I Could Just Kill A Man" all rock with a furious energy. Best of all, though, is the revision of the relatively obscure "Pistol Grip Pump" by Volume 10. The bass rises and crashes like a tsunami, while Morello morphs his guitar into cheesy funk synth licks--it's as close as they'll ever get to raging against the funk, although their cover of Afrika Bambattaa's "Renegades Of Funk" comes in a close second. Elsewhere, the band's limited powers of reinvention are stripped bare when they tackle a holy grail of confrontational rock--the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man", the Stooges' "Down On The Street" and MC5's "Kick Out The Jams". On the latter, Zack makes a valiant attempt to sing (later sounding as fragile as a butterfly on a wheel on the acoustic version of Devo's "Beautiful Farm") and makes it plain that screaming like a member of the Socialist Workers Party is clearly what he excels at. Renegades is like a lesson in "how can be I down?" historical revisionism, one that sees RATM attempting to secure their legacy up among their musical heroes. They get five out of 10 for effort. --Chris Campion


Customer Reviews:   Read 17 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Certainly not their best!   November 16, 2008
This album is really bad. I've tried to like it. I've had it for years and every so often I go back and listen to it. Even the Rolling Stones cover is awful. Maggie's Farm is probably the only song on here that I like, and by like I mean it'd get 3 stars. But the rest of the album is just unimaginitive and technically mediocre. I woulnd't give it a 1 star, that'd be unfair. I do like quite a lot of the RATM music that I hear, but this album was clearly in the sale section all those years ago for a very good reason. They must have run out of good ideas earlier on in their career, which is a shame. If I wanted to listen to something similar I'd just go with Faith No More and never look back.


5 out of 5 stars Not simply a covers album   September 27, 2008
This album appears to many as a covers album, using none of their own material. This is definately not the case. The reason for this album was celebrating and applauding influences and good friends of the band (Cypress Hill in particular), by re-recording their hits. I use the word 're-recording' because the 'covers' of the songs are completely reworked to fit the mould of the Rage style we all know and love. People who simply dismiss this album really haven't listened to it properly. It may not be the same without Zack's phenomenal and awe-inspiring lyrics, but it is still a masterpiece. If you listen to the original versions of songs, such as Bruce Springsteen's The Ghost of Tom Joad, you would definately not say it was a cover, but instead homage being paid to the Boss. This album has introduced me to new styles of music, the sort that made Rage what it is today, where Zack gains his rapping influences and friendships, with EPMD and Cypress Hill. After this album, i tried to listen to all the original versions, but the differences are more than significant, with the originals being awesome in their own way. I would now rate Cypress Hill as one of my favourite groups, only having discovered them through this album.
For any true Rage fan, it is obviously a must-buy. For any non-Rage fans, buy it and listen, you will be surprised what they can do, and in time may well convert you into a fan.



4 out of 5 stars Fitting Departure Album From RAGE   August 24, 2007
In 2000 in the midst of a break up Rage decided to treat their fans to one last record,a record made also in tribute to some of the bands who inspired them. And so it was that Renegades came about. The Album opens with a couple of Hip-Hop covers, the Eric B and Rakim classic "Mic Fiend" and a more obscure but L.A favourite, Volume 10's "Pistol Grip Pump". Both of these are an exellent example of rage making songs their own, with Tom Morello serving up a tasty riff, Brad and Tim keeping a tight rythym and Zachs smooth rapping becoming the icing on the desert. And the fun doesn't stop there, The MC5 becoming an obvious choice for a political cover song, Rage serve up a stomping version of "Kick out the Jams" that perfectly suits there radical musings.

While there are many other exellent covers, particularly where rage go punk on "In My Eyes" with some astonishing drumming from Brad Wilk, a blazing live cover of The Boss's "Ghost of Tom Joad" and a touching version of Devo's "Beautiful World" where zach actually sings, the band do hit a couple of false notes here and there. E.P.M.D's "Im Housin'" for example isnt a very enjoyable listen, and they do soften up The Stooges "Down On The Street" a little too much for my liking. However Dylans "Maggies Farms" isnt half bad and an ambitious cover song for a Rap/Rock band! so overall Kudos to rage for providing a fitting cover album, that im sure most Rage fans will enjoy and perhaps the bands can have a giggle too! Good Times.



4 out of 5 stars A fine curtain call.   April 18, 2006
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

By 1999, RATM felt like a spent force. Having spent aeons producing their second and third albums (four years between their debut and Evil Empire; three years between that and The Battle of Los Angeles) the cracks were starting to show. But the band confounded all expectation, releasing a covers album in tribute to the artists that influenced them growing up, produced by - who else, for a record of this nature? - Rick Rubin.

All told, this is a patchy album, but the better tracks more than make up for it, and a good way for the band to bow out. Springsteen's 'The Ghost of Tom Joad' is a gloriously echoing epic that made it justifiably into their latter-day setlists. 'How I Could Just Kill A Man' is a faithful, if slightly rocked up, Cypress hill song that feels like it was written for RATM. 'Kick Out The Jams' is one of the weaker moments due to Tom Morello's outlandish solo; always an inventive player, just this once the song would have been more suited to a normal solo.

There are less enjoyable covers here as well - 'Pistol Grip Pump,' 'Street Fighting Man' - but all the songs here, good or bad, are blown away by the closer, 'Maggie's Farm.' Previously one the standouts of Dylan's wondrous Bringing It All Back Home album, it's the song the band rework to the best effect. The song is almost completely unrecognisable except for the fantastic lyrics, with Morello's multi-textured, explosive solo replacing Dylan's wheezy harmonica with ease. It's six and a half minutes in length, and - just like 'Freedom' on their first album - is a fitting closer to the album and the band's career.

This album is not perfect; it may not even have been necessary. But if you want to complete all the pieces of the Rage Against The Machine picture, you need to buy this album, to see where the ideas came from for the most incendiary band of the 1990s.



4 out of 5 stars The Original Artists   February 3, 2006
 12 out of 14 found this review helpful

1. Microphone fiend - Eric B and Rakim
2. Pistol grip pump - Volume 10
3. Kick out the jam - MC5
4. Renegades of funk - Afrika Bambattaa
5. Beautiful world - Devo
6. I'm housin' - EPMD
7. In my eyes - Minor Threat
8. How could I just kill a man - Cypress Hill
9. The ghost of Tom Joad - Bruce Springsteen
10. Down on the street - The Stooges
11. Street fighting man - The Rolling Stones
12. Maggies farm - Bob Dylan




 

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