| "People of the Sun" | ||||||||
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| Single by Rage Against the Machine | ||||||||
| from the album Evil Empire | ||||||||
| Released | 22 August 1996 | |||||||
| Format | CD, 7", 12" | |||||||
| Genre | Rap metal, alternative metal | |||||||
| Length | 2 min 30 s | |||||||
| Producer | Brendan O'Brien, Rage Against the Machine | |||||||
| Rage Against the Machine singles chronology | ||||||||
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"People of the Sun" is the second single by the American band Rage Against the Machine for their 1996 album Evil Empire. The song is about the Zapatista revolution. Lead vocalist Zack de la Rocha wrote the song after a visit to the Chiapas in southern Mexico. "People of the Sun" also has a music video. It was nominated for a Best Hard Rock Performance Grammy in 1998, but it lost to the Smashing Pumpkins' "The End is the Beginning is the End".
The song has a wide variety of references, most notably the destruction of the Aztec empire by the Spanish (see the article Five suns) and the Zoot Suit Riots of Los Angeles in 1943. De La Rocha also refers to the last Aztecan Emperor Cuauhtémoc, who was tortured and eventually executed by the Spaniards.
The single artwork of the corn, sickle and ammunition belt is a 1927 photograph taken by Italian photographer Tina Modotti in Mexico.[1]
The final version of the song made its live début on May 9, 1996, in Paris, France.
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The band were known to perform this song live as early as 1992, the only difference being Zack's lyrics. A studio version was also recorded and has circulated on the internet. The original lyrics contained verses from their song "Fistful of Steel".
This version was first played on December 14, 1992, at the Whisky a GoGo in West Hollywood, California.
The video, directed by Peter Christopherson and produced by Fiz Oliver at Squeak Pictures, opens with shots of a dead Mexican Indian girl; her arm starts bleeding and the blood shows the words "Trickle down". Statistics illustrating the plight of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation are shown from a film projector being run in a morgue. Military footage of United States arms arriving in Mexico and the Zapatistas themselves are interspersed with this and shots of the band playing in front of a brick wall in about a 10 by 10 space. The version seen on MTV is the edited version; scenes of an indigenous worker being buried alive and trampled, and dead teenagers in the morgue, have been removed and replaced with military footage. The black and white documentary-style scenes of the laborer and the vaqueros are from the movie ¡Qué viva México! by Sergei Eisenstein, from the 1930s.[2]
In 1997 Rage Against The Machine released the "People Of The Sun" EP on 10-inch vinyl. It was distributed by Revelation Records, who had signed De La Rocha's previous band Inside Out before they split in 1990. The vinyl was shipped with a card containing information on the Zapatista movement in the Chiapas region of Mexico. In 2008, the vinyl was re-issued by Revelation Records. The Rage Against The Machine logo is off-center and vertically distorted on both the original and re-issue pressings.
A-Side
B-Side
Intro, Zapata's Blood, and Without a Face recorded live at the Pink Pop, May 27, 1996
Hadda Be Playing on the Jukebox recorded live at Milan Dragway, Detroit, July 9, 1993
Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos (H. Shocklee/C. Ridenhour/E. Sadler/W. Drayton)
All other songs written and arranged by Rage Against the Machine.
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