Evil Empire (album)

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Evil Empire is the second studio album by the American rock band Rage Against the Machine, released on April 16, 1996, by Epic Records. It debuted at number 1 on the US Billboard 200 chart with first week sales of 249,000 copies, and the song "Tire Me" won a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance; "Bulls on Parade" and "People of the Sun" were nominated for Grammys for Best Hard Rock Performance. On May 24, 2000, the album was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.<ref>RIAA RIAA Certification search results Template:Webarchive Note: type "Evil Empire" (without quotation marks) in field "Title:"</ref>

The album's title is a reference to a term used in the early 1980s by President Ronald Reagan and many American conservatives to describe the Soviet Union.<ref name="mtv1996">Staff report (May 3, 1996). Rage Builds "Evil Empire" MTV</ref>

Background

According to MTV News, 'Evil Empire' is taken from Ronald Reagan's epithet of the Soviet Union, which the band feels could just as easily apply to the United States:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Before the May 27, 1996, performance of "Without a Face" that is featured on the band's 1998 Live & Rare album, Zack de la Rocha said: "It seems as if soon as the... the wall in Germany fell, that the US government was busy building another one on the border between the US and Mexico. Since 1986, as a result of a lot of the hate talk and hysteria that the government of the United States has been speaking, 1,500 bodies have been found on the border. We wrote this song in response to it."

"Year of tha Boomerang" had previously been included in the film Higher Learning, though its title was written as "Year of the Boomerang" on the packaging of the film's soundtrack, as well as that of the song's promotional single.

Packaging

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The cover of the album features an altered version of a painting of the 1940s–1950s comic book hero Crimebuster done by Mel Ramos, with the emblem on the boy's costume changed from a "c" to a lowercase "e", the caption "Crime Buster" changed to the album's title, and the color of the star in the background changed. The boy on the cover was author and businessman Ari Meisel when he was 11 years old. Meisel told Kerrang! that the original painting was a birthday present from Ramos.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Additional artwork for the album was created by Barbara Kruger, some of which appears in the video for "Bulls on Parade".

The album's CD booklet includes a picture of a pile of various political and philosophical books, which include:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Promotion

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In 1995, the band sent a free 7″ record to everyone who signed up for the fan club promoted in the liner notes of their debut. Doubling as an apology to those who had received nothing and a promotion for the upcoming album, it came in a plain cardboard-colored fold-out with a black-and-white American flag on the cover alongside the band's name and "Evil Empire" in capital letters. On the back cover was a UPC with marker scribble on the barcode. The A-side was a reissue of the Evening Session-version of "Bombtrack" first broadcast on June 7, 1993 (listed as "Bombtrack (Live on the BBC)"), and the B-side was a then-unreleased cover of N.W.A's "Fuck tha Police" that was recorded live on August 13, 1995, at a benefit concert for Mumia Abu-Jamal at the Capitol Ballroom in Washington, D.C.

Reception and legacy

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Rolling Stone affirmed that "this music isn't supposed to be fun," and continued: "Rage Against the Machine have jacked up the sociopolitical siege mentality in their metallic hip – hop to such a dogmatic degree – and honed their sound to such maniacally shrill perfection – that the band and the roaring joys of its harangue 'n' roll seem virtually sexless."<ref>Rolling Stone Yearbook, 26 December 1996–9 January 1997</ref> AllMusic reviewer Stephen Thomas Erlewine was less impressed, citing the band as "lacking the dexterity to fully execute their metal/hip-hop fusion," and concludes that "Evil Empire succeeds only on the level of a sonic assault." Walter Schreifels, frontman and guitarist of Quicksand, included the album on his list of the ten best in the post-hardcore genre. He adds it exposed a more general audience to hardcore, who were unaware of such, more so than the band's self-titled debut album, which is more rooted in rock and hip-hop.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Andrew Flory and John Covach, in their book What's That Sound?: An Introduction to Rock and Its History declared the album is what cemented the band as "an important force in the rap-rock style.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 2024, Loudwire staff elected it as the best hard rock album of 1996.<ref name="loudbesthr24">Template:Cite web</ref>

Track listing

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Personnel

Rage Against the Machine

Technical

  • Brendan O'Brien – production
  • Rage Against the Machine – co-production
  • Andy Wallace – mixing
  • Nick DiDia – engineering, recording
  • Caram Costanzo – engineering
  • Clay Harper – assistant engineering
  • Dave Rat – recording ("Down Rodeo" vocals)
  • Paul Kosky – recording ("Down Rodeo" vocals)
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering

Artwork and design

  • Rage Against the Machine – art direction
  • Aimée Macauley – art direction
  • Lisa Johnson – photography

Recording locations

  • Cole Rehearsal Studios, Los Angeles, CA – recording
  • Kiss Music Recording Studios, Melbourne – recording ("Down Rodeo" vocals)
  • The Enterprise – mixing
  • Gateway Mastering Studios – mastering

Charts

Weekly charts

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Weekly chart performance for Evil Empire
Chart (1996) Peak
position
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)<ref name="Listen">Template:Cite news</ref> 4
Spanish Albums (AFYVE)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> 10

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for Evil Empire
Chart (1996) Position
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 41

Certifications

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Awards

See also

References

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