18 years after it's original release, the song was an unlikely candidate for the best selling Christmas song of 2009. It's lyrics rail against imperialism, mass media propaganda, the military industrial complex and those who benefit from it's violence against the world. As such there is a certain irony that the Sun newspaper who have backed numerous wars, and attacks on the poor formally backed the band and published quotes from Tom Morello asking people to stand up to "illegitimate authority". Whilst Simon Cowell has condemned those behind the Facebook campaign as being "Scrooge", they have successfully raised £50,000 for the homeless charity Shelter, and Rage Against the Machine intend to give profits from the sales away to a UK music charity which supports disadvantaged children.
As Rage Against the Machine are signed to Sony records, the very same label as the contending X Factor song, many have condemned the exercise as pointless and counterproductive as millionaire corporate executives and investors are benefiting significantly the campaign's success. But if these events prove anything, it is that capitalism is greedy enough to sell you the weapons to fight it.
Merry Xmas and a Happy New Fear, and Many Happy Revolutions..
Comments
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|n your opinion...
20.12.2009 20:22
Max
What about Bob Dylan's "Must Be Santa" off the Christmas album?
20.12.2009 20:26
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVs6X9yIM_k&feature=player_embedded
Santa
Whatever
21.12.2009 01:35
People are manipulated en mass even more effectively with social networking, data-mining, and other forms of quasi surveillance. The whole thing is a conspiracy by Sony's A&R people. It's all manufactured controversy to maximize sales and recuperate dissent. The British media is the best in the world at social control through cultural manipulation, and they know and are proud of it. In fact 90% of the activist types I've met are really just wannabe media wankers, no better than 14 year old kids wanting to be David Beckham. Because this is the kind of Society of the Spectacle we live in. Everyone has lost hope of change and just desperately wants to bullshit their way out of the anonymity of a pointless, wage-slave existence.........
anon
Some observations.
21.12.2009 10:18
The Facebook group was set up by Tracy, and Jon Morter, neither have politcal motivations for having Rage at Chritmas no. 1, for them it is solely about the music, this could be said for a lot of people who bought the track too. There are also a lot of people who bought the track because they wanted to see an anti-capitalist band and song at number 1. The arguments rage on the Facebook group page already between people who don't want to bring politics into the campaign (odd choice of band and song then!), and those who see the group as a vehicle for getting across a radical message, and for organising.
It is very off putting that the organisers Tracy and Jon are not interested in RATM's message, but see it as real music vs generic pop, and Jon is very weak in interviews, (maybe his wife Tracy would be more passionate?), he has rarely even mentioned Shelter in his interviews, let alone what Rage stand for, although, I suspect Tracy is the driving force behind the campaigns support of Shelter.
Subversion - Recuperation - Subversion again?
So what do we have, a nice little boxed in corporatised piece of "rebellion"? In some ways yes, in others no. aside from the obvious of people being exposed to RATM, and what they stand for (they played a big part in me becoming radicalised), we have interesting discussions on the group page; although, the groups admins were deleting posts about the war, and other issues in the run up has they deemed them "harmful to the campaign". In short the Facebook group is definately not going to be the driving force for real dissent.
However, RATM have promised to do a massive free gig next year, having seen RATM live, front man Zac is a very articulate passionate speaker, and will not hold back. Exposure on this scale to radical thinking surely can only be a good thing? And RATM will step outside of the box of "real music vs pop/RATM vs Cowell" and put very real issues out there.
In short, I am glad RATM are number 1, people are right to point out that it is recuperated plastic rebellion, but RATM have the potential to put across there very real anti-capitalist revolutionary ideas as a result, and no doubt will seize on this.
Fly Poster
Why the complaint?
21.12.2009 12:18
First: someone got off their arse and did something. The critics are generally people who did not get off their arse and do something. It is the fine balance between arse-getter-offers and arse-remainer-onners that turns it from a potentially radicalising event into just another spark in the Spectacle.
You may not like Facebook. You may not like Cowell. You may not like the X-Factor Plans for politics. But not liking them is arse-remainer-onner until you do something. All the responses about how "I do this, and this, and this" are not really germane to the Situation. Either you do something radical with Facebook or you are not engaging with legitimate communities.
And that is a constant refrain on Indymedia: lack of radical engagement with communities. Putting Rage Against the Machine at Number One is trivial. It is trite. It is beneath the ideological purity of the activist. But it is, as Situations go, where the action is.
Anonymous
irony
21.12.2009 17:49
anyone heard the rage song "no shelter?"
"Make you think that what you need is what their selling,
make you think that buying is rebelling."
Do you think this is why they are donating to shelter? :P
A. Guy
Sony are well known anti-capitalists
21.12.2009 18:09
its ashame the same people that put all the effort into persuading to buy a product didnt put that same energy into activism. but i suppose all consumerists can do is to consume.
i love the band and some of what they have done. the victory is great on on face value, but i wouldnt read any further into it than that.
A
come on you grumpy gits
22.12.2009 22:40
Hundreds of thousands of people during a recession coughed up a pound to buy a song they already had just to SAY F OFF TO THE ESTABLISHMENT
were not alone
stig
there's hope
23.12.2009 11:04
fran