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Zack de la Rocha


 

Zack de la Rocha (born January 12, 1970) is the former lead singer of Rage Against the Machine, a politically-inspired band who were highly regarded as one of the most influential rock bands in recent history, having helped pave the way for many of today's hard rock bands that fuse rap and rock.

Related Topics:
January 12 - 1970 - Rage Against the Machine - Hard rock

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In 1983, Zack's father suffered a nervous breakdown, and took his religious ideals to extremes. He destroyed his art and when Zack visited him at the weekends, he was forced to fast, sit in a room with the curtains closed and the door locked and help his father destroy his paintings -- paintings which had helped him establish a sense of Chicano identity. After a while, he was unable to cope with this lifestyle, and stayed with his mother in Irvine, which at the time was "perhaps one of the whitest cities" in Southern California.

Related Topics:
1983 - Irvine - Southern California

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The lifestyle Beto forced upon Zack brought culture shock upon him as well as an identity crisis. He was alienated from the Chicano community, and was an outsider in the California suburbs where Chicanos were typically only seen doing menial work. In high school, he became involved in the punk and hardcore scene, and played guitar and sang for a straight edge band called Hardstance. His interest in bands like the Sex Pistols and Bad Religion turned into an appreciation for other bands like Minor Threat, Bad Brains, and Teen Idles.

Related Topics:
Suburbs - Punk - Hardcore - Straight edge - Hardstance - Sex Pistols - Bad Religion - Minor Threat - Bad Brains - Teen Idles

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Zack eventually formed Inside Out, which gained a large following in Huntington Beach and Irvine. They released a single record, No Spiritual Surrender on Revelation Records in 1990, before breaking up. In Zack's words, Inside Out was "about completely detaching ourselves from society to see ourselves as...as spirits, and not bowing down to a system that sees you as just another pebble on a beach. I channeled all my anger out through that band."

Related Topics:
Inside Out - Huntington Beach - No Spiritual Surrender - Revelation Records - 1990

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Zack's Chicano heritage separated him from the rich, white kids that surrounded him; although he was never economically deprived as his fellow Chicanos, he felt the same tension and rejection as they did. He found himself relating to hip-hop acts such as Public Enemy, KRS One, and Run-DMC. After Inside Out broke up, he embraced hip-hop and began freestyling at local clubs, where he met Tom Morello and Brad Wilk. Eventually, Zack's friend Tim Commerford joined them, and Rage Against the Machine was formed.

Related Topics:
Hip-hop - Public Enemy - KRS One - Run-DMC - Tom Morello - Brad Wilk - Tim Commerford - Rage Against the Machine

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Before long, Rage Against the Machine were on the main stage at Lollapalooza II, and were one of the most politically-charged bands ever to receive extensive airplay from radio and MTV. Zack became one of the most visible champions of left-wing causes around the world, fighting for the causes of Leonard Peltier and Mumia Abu-Jamal, and supporting the Zapatista movement in Mexico. He even spoke on the floor of the UN, testifying against the US and their treatment of Abu-Jamal. The music and the message were so intertwined for him that he did not consider any of Rage's albums a success unless they provoked tangible political change.

Related Topics:
Lollapalooza - MTV - Leonard Peltier - Mumia Abu-Jamal - Zapatista - Mexico - UN

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Rage's second and third albums peaked at number one, but did not result in the political action Zack had hoped for. He became increasingly restless, and undertook collaborations with artists like KRS One and Chuck D.

Related Topics:
KRS One - Chuck D

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In October 2000, Zack left Rage Against the Machine, due to "creative differences." However, it is rumored that Tim Commerford's stunt at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards, where (urged on by Michael Moore) he climbed on one of the fixtures on stage, was the catalyst for Zack's decision to leave the band. In 2001, he was recording material on separate occasions with The Roots' drummer ?uestlove and Company Flow frontman El-P. In 2002 de la Rocha appeared in a minor role on Blackalicious's Blazing Arrow, on the track "Release." He has yet to release an album, although a collaboration with DJ Shadow, "March of Death", was released free over the Internet in 2003 in protest of President Bush's war on Iraq. Another artist involved in the making of Zack's solo album is Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails. There is no set date for its release.

Related Topics:
2000 - Rage Against the Machine - Tim Commerford - Stunt - MTV - Michael Moore - 2001 - The Roots - ?uestlove - Company Flow - El-P - Blackalicious - Blazing Arrow - DJ Shadow - Internet - 2003 - President Bush - War on Iraq - Trent Reznor - Nine Inch Nails

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Zack has largely remained out of the public eye ever since the breakup. His most recent appearances have been on the Songs and Artists That Inspired Fahrenheit 9/11 soundtrack (with the track "We Want It All") and Saul Williams self-titled album in 2004.

Related Topics:
Songs and Artists That Inspired Fahrenheit 9/11 - We Want It All - Saul Williams - 2004

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