Killing in the Name
"Killing in the Name" | ||||
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Single by Rage Against the Machine | ||||
from the album Rage Against the Machine | ||||
Released | November 2, 1992 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 5:14 | |||
Label | Epic | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) |
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Rage Against the Machine singles chronology | ||||
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Rage Against the Machine reissued singles chronology | ||||
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Audio sample | ||||
Alternative cover | ||||
"Killing in the Name" is a song by the American band
"Killing in the Name" was released as the
Writing
Tom Morello wrote the guitar riffs while teaching a student drop D tuning; he briefly paused the lesson to record the riff.[1] The band worked on the song the next day. According to Morello, "Killing in the Name" was a collaborative effort, combining his riff with Tim Commerford's "magmalike" bass, Brad Wilk's "funky, brutal" drumming and vocalist Zack de la Rocha's "conviction".[2] Morello recorded his part on a Fender Telecaster.[3]
Music
"Killing in the Name" combines elements of punk and hip hop[4] and stylistically has been described as alternative metal,[5] rap metal,[6] rap rock,[7] hard rock,[8] and nu metal.[9] The journalist Peter Buckley described it as "a howling, expletive-driven tirade against the ills of American society".[10] The song builds in intensity, as de la Rocha chants the line "Fuck you, I won't do what you tell me", building in a crescendo the next four times and angrily screaming the line the final eight times, culminating with the scream "Motherfucker!"[11] The song contains the word "fuck" 16 times.[12]
The lyrics were inspired by the police brutality suffered by Rodney King and the subsequent 1992 Los Angeles riots.[13][14][15] The refrain "some of those that work forces are the same that burn crosses" draws what the band views as a link between the Los Angeles Police Department and the Ku Klux Klan.[16] According to BBC News, "Killing in the Name" rails against "the military–industrial complex, justifying killing for the benefit of, as the song puts it, the chosen whites".[17]
Artwork
The cover of the CD single is
Release
"Killing in the Name" was originally released as part of a 12-song self-released cassette. The first video for "Killing in the Name" did not receive heavy airplay in the United States due to the explicit lyrics. The song received substantial airplay in Europe and drove the band's popularity abroad.[18]
After signing with
Complaints
On February 21, 1993, the BBC Radio 1 DJ Bruno Brookes accidentally played the uncensored version of the song on his Top 40 Countdown, leading to 138 complaints.[19] Brookes was recording an advertisement for the following week's Top 40 Countdown while the song played.[12][17] In November 2008, the song was played over the speakers in an Asda supermarket in Preston, Lancashire, prompting complaints from customers. Asda issued an apology.[17][20][21]
Use in political campaigns
In 2012, Morello demanded the right-wing UK Independence Party stop using "Killing in the Name" in rallies.[22] Following the 2020 United States elections, a video of pro-Trump protesters dancing to "Killing in the Name" was widely shared on social media. Commentators saw it as a misappropriation of the song. Rage Against the Machine responded in a tweet: "They just don't GET IT do they?"[23]
In 2022,
2009 UK Christmas number one campaign
In early December 2009, the English DJ
As the X Factor song was donating some of the profits to charity,
After the X Factor creator
Rage Against the Machine attracted controversy when they performed an uncensored rendition of the song on BBC Radio 5 Live in mid-December 2009, despite the hosts asking them to censor the expletives. During the crescendo of their performance, frontman Zack De La Rocha started out only singing "I won't do what you tell me", with a pause where he normally sings "fuck you", but after a few lines, he screamed the lyrics, "Fuck you, I won't do what you tell me" repeatedly. Hosts Nicky Campbell and Shelagh Fogarty apologized afterwards.[31][43]
On December 20, 2009,
The campaign spread to Ireland, where, like the UK, the Christmas number one had been dominated by X Factor finalists for five years. The campaign was less successful in Ireland and McElderry beat Rage Against the Machine to Christmas number one, with Rage Against the Machine reaching number two.[47]
On June 6, 2010, Rage Against the Machine performed at a free concert for 40,000 fans in Finsbury Park.[48] On stage, Tracy and Jon Morter were handed a representative cheque in the amount of £162,713.03, representing the proceeds from donations to JustGiving and royalties from sales of the single.[49]
As a result of the campaign, the song is featured in the 2011 UK edition of the Guinness World Records under the category of 'Fastest-selling digital track (UK)', after recording 502,672 downloads in its first week.[50]
Music video
The video, produced and directed by Peter Gideon, a guitar student of Tom Morello who had a video camera, was filmed during two shows in small Los Angeles venues, the Whisky a Go Go and the Club With No Name. Released in December 1992, the uncensored version of the video clip was shown on European MTV but was banned on American MTV because of the explicit lyrics. As a result, the video's existence was in doubt until its release on Rage Against the Machine: The Video.[18]
In 2021, in a collaboration with the arts collective the Ummah Chroma, Rage Against the Machine released a 15-minute short documentary video about the making of "Killing in the Name."
Accolades
In July 2009, "Killing in the Name" was voted at number two in the Hottest 100 of all time countdown poll, conducted by Australian radio station, Triple J. More than half a million votes were cast.[1] The song was also voted at number 17 in the 1998 edition of Hottest 100 of All Time and was voted number 6 on the Hottest 100 list in 1993.
In 2007, "Killing in the Name" earned a spot on Guitar World's list of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos" at number 89.[53][54]
In 2002, Rolling Stone magazine listed "Killing in the Name" as the 24th in its 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time and as the 207th in its "Top 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[2][55] In March 2023, they ranked "Killing in the Name" at number 38 on their "100 Greatest Heavy Metal Songs of All Time" list.[56]
In 2010, the New Statesman listed it as number 12 on their list of the "Top 20 Political Songs" as voted for by the Political Studies Association.[15]
In 2010, 2011, and 2012,
In 2021, the UK Official Charts Company announced that "Killing in the Name" had been named as the 'UK's Favourite Christmas Number 1 of All Time'[60] in a poll commissioned to celebrate the 70th Official Christmas Number 1 race (and as a tie-in with the book The Official Christmas No. 1 Singles Book by Michael Mulligan).[61][62]
Live performances
The song was performed as an extended instrumental at their first public performance at Cal State in the Quad, on October 23, 1991. Bassist Tim Commerford is known to chant the backing vocals of "now you do what they told ya" of the chorus during most live performances.
Zack de la Rocha sometimes changes the lyrics in the second verse from "Some of those that work forces are the same that burn crosses" to "Some of those that burn crosses are the same that hold office" when playing live.[63]
As part of supergroup Audioslave, guitarist Tom Morello incorporated instrumentals from Rage Against the Machine including versions of "Killing in the Name" into their performances.[64]
Rage Against the Machine performed the song live in 1999 at the
Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Killing in the Name" | 5:13 |
2. | "Darkness of Greed" | 3:40 |
3. | "Clear the Lane" | 3:47 |
Total length: | 12:40 |
"Darkness of Greed" and "Clear the Lane" were re-mastered versions of the respective demo tracks. Another version of "Darkness of Greed", titled merely "Darkness", was included on the 1994 soundtrack album for The Crow. The previously unreleased demo appeared on the XX 20th Anniversary Edition of their debut album, which was released on November 27, 2012.[66]
Personnel
- Zack de la Rocha – lead vocals
- Tom Morello – guitar
- Tim Commerford – bass guitar, backing vocals
- Brad Wilk – drums
Charts
|
|
Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[78] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[82] | Gold | 45,000‡ |
Germany (BVMI)[83] | Gold | 250,000‡ |
Italy (FIMI)[84] | Platinum | 70,000‡ |
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[85] | Gold | 30,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[86] | 2× Platinum | 1,200,000‡ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Other uses
During one of his last performances before he died, American comedian Bill Hicks ended a set by smashing his microphone against a stool while singing along to "Killing in the Name" playing over the loudspeakers.[87]
As part of the US
During the
On June 29, 2022, a Vancouver radio station,
Cover versions and parodies
This section may require WP:SONGCOVER.(July 2018) ) |
- In July 2007, a remix of the song by
- In June 2007, funk band The Apples from Tel Aviv, Israel, released a cover on a 7" vinyl on Freestyle Records.[96][97][98][99]
- On 22 August 2008, Scottish alt-rock band Reading Festival on BBC Radio 1.[100][101] The band agreed that, for this live broadcast, they would not use expletives and sung just the melody in place of "Fuck you" in the song. The crowd were bound by no such agreement and began an impromptu mass sing along with "Fuck you" in place, audible by the recording equipment. As this broadcast was going out live at lunchtime, Jo Whiley was required to apologize on air after the performance.[102]
- French band La Maison Tellier released a country-folk version of "Killing in the Name" in their first album (2006).[103]
- In 2008, Icelandic electronica group FM Belfast released a single called "Lotus", a minimal electro cover version of "Killing in the Name".[104]
- Slovak DJ and producer L-Plus released a drum and bass remix of "Killing in the Name" in 2008.[17][105]
- Australian rock group FourPlay String Quartet recorded a version of the song for their 2009 album Fourthcoming.[106]
- On July 4, 2010, American jam band Phish covered the song after introducing Rage Against the Machine as "one of the only other bands, other than Phish, that won't bullshit you."[107][108]
- New York-based band Emmure covered the song at the Hoodwink Festival along with "Bulls on Parade".[109]
- Zac Brown Band has covered the song on several occasions during their live performances.[110]
- Richard Cheese recorded a version the song in the style of lounge music for his 2011 album A Lounge Supreme.
- Bonded by Blood covered the song in their 2012 album The Aftermath.
- Lauren Mayberry recorded a cover version of the song along with her band, Blue Sky Archives.[111]
- Reading and Leeds Festival 2015.[112]
- Prophets of Rage, an American rap rock supergroup, formed in 2016 and including several former members of RATM, recorded a live rendition of "Killing in the Name" in 2016.[113]
- Starbomb parodied the song, titling it "Filling in the Name Of". The song is about "a long Tetris piece who begins to lament his place in life after being used constantly to finish Tetris puzzles". It was released on the group's third and final album The Tryforce in 2019.[114]
- Machine Gun Kelly and Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker covered this song in 2020 as part of a protest movement preceded by the murder of George Floyd by a local US police.[115][116]
- Dutch producer Sefa [nl] made a Frenchcore version of the song in his 2022 album Klaagzang.[117]
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this is the biggest rise up against the ' industry manufactured shite ' in years and thats why its important --- and fukin funny at the same time act now.
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He's just some kid with a career ahead. I've got nothing against that, but it would be kind of funny if Rage Against The Machine got it because it would prove a point.
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while the song choices may sometimes verge on the unintentionally funny, this appropriation of music by the military is anything but a joke
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The new tracks on the album continue the group's pattern of parodying famous video games. One of these includes "Filling in the Name Of," a "Killing in the Name" parody about a long Tetris piece who begins to lament his place in life after being used constantly to finish Tetris puzzles.
- ^ Skinner, Tom (2020-06-04). "Machine Gun Kelly and Travis Barker cover Rage Against The Machine's 'Killing In The Name' for Black Lives Matter". NME.com. Retrieved 2022-06-23.
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External links
- "Killing In The Name" Official music video on YouTube
- Killing in the Name at AllMusic