Tom Morello was recently asked on Beats 1 about reasons behind the downfall of Rage Against the Machine, to which he replied (via The PRP):
[metalwani_content_ad]
“It was a lack of – and I’ll put myself first and foremost – a lack of emotional maturity in being able to deal with each other as people.
“We had political vision, we played and the shows never suffered, but we just couldn’t agree on stuff, and it just sort of unearthed feelings that made it hard to make records.
“I think there were competing visions for what it should be, and competing feelings of what it should feel like to be in the band that we didn’t deal with.
“My version of the band was: ‘Let’s make a record every six months. Let’s be the political Led Zeppelin, let’s overthrow the government and make the best records anyone ever did… by Wednesday. Go, go!’
“In that pursuit, I was not always sensitive to the emotional needs of my band members. Everybody has their role in it, but that’s where I sort of contributed to the chaos that eventually ended the band.
[metalwani_content_ad]
“But I will say this: my glass-half-full version is, for a band that had extremely combustible elements, to be able to have made four records, to be able to have played the shows we did – I think it’s a miracle.”