Rage Against The Machine - XX (20th Anniversary Special Edition) - Rage Against the Machine

Rage Against The Machine - XX (20th Anniversary Special Edition)

Rage Against the Machine

  • Genre: Metal
  • Release Date: 1992-11-03
  • Explicitness: explicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 25

  • ℗ 1991, 2012 Rage Against The Machine/(P) 1992, 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Bombtrack 4:03 USD 1.29
2
Killing In The Name 5:13 USD 1.29
3
Take The Power Back 5:36 USD 1.29
4
Settle For Nothing 4:46 USD 1.29
5
Bullet In The Head 5:06 USD 1.29
6
Know Your Enemy 4:54 USD 1.29
7
Wake Up 6:03 USD 1.29
8
Fistful Of Steel 5:30 USD 1.29
9
Township Rebellion 5:24 USD 1.29
10
Freedom 6:06 USD 1.29
11
Bombtrack 5:56 USD 1.29
12
Bullet In The Head 5:43 USD 1.29
13
Take the Power Back 6:09 USD 1.29
14
Bombtrack 4:04 USD 1.29
15
Take The Power Back 5:39 USD 1.29
16
Bullet In The Head 5:09 USD 1.29
17
Darkness of Greed 3:39 USD 1.29
18
Clear The Lane 3:47 USD 1.29
19
Township Rebellion 4:18 USD 1.29
20
Know Your Enemy 4:18 USD 1.29
21
Mindset's A Threat 3:55 USD 1.29
22
Killing In The Name 6:26 USD 1.29
23
Autologic 4:06 USD 1.29
24
The Narrows 4:35 USD 1.29
25
Freedom 5:40 USD 1.29
Rage Against The Machine - XX (20th Anniversary Special Edition) - Rage Against the Machine
Cover Album Rage Against The Machine - XX (20th Anniversary Special Edition) - Rage Against the Machine

Reviews

  • The original but better EQ, mix, and mastering
    5
    By Kit Karamak
    The title sums it up. This is the debut song with demo versions included, but what matters is Brad Wilks. The drummer is clearer and cleaner here because the kick and toms stand out with more attack. Tommy’s guitar stands out cleaner from Tim’s bassline. Tim’s bass sounds crisper and fatter. Whether you play this on a cellphone or stock radio, it stands out as far superior, sonically, than the original. I bought both the same day and played through both. Then I never listened to the original versions again. If you use a Subwoofer or headphones, you’re in for a TREAT. If you’re a musician, you’ll appreciate this remaster for the clear separation of instruments. Buy this version if you can’t decide between this and the original debut album version. It’s worth the extra $5. You’re wecome.