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2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List

2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List

Best of 2012: 2012 Best of San Antonio Food Winners List 4/25/2012

Best Beer Selection

Best of SA 2012: There are times at the Flying Saucer that frequent flyers need to be told to fasten their seat belts because they're in for a taste explosion. Even those who have... 4/25/2012
Flea Markets

Flea Markets

City Guide 2013: Here in San Antonio we have fine flea markets, influenced heavily by the vast indoor/outdoor mercados of Mexico. Looking to get a sonogram and a haircut... 2/28/2013
Murder Destroyed Charity Lee's Family, Forever Altered Her Concept of Justice

Murder Destroyed Charity Lee's Family, Forever Altered Her Concept of Justice

News: On a sweltering Monday evening in May, Charity Lee sat near a makeshift pulpit inside the Greater Faith Church on the city’s East Side. Before her sat... By Michael Barajas 6/12/2013
Newsmonger: Euthanasia by Proxy

Newsmonger: Euthanasia by Proxy

News: Last week, Express-News editorial board writers heaped praise on city Animal Care Services, saying new leadership has catapulted San Antonio’s handling of strays... By Michael Barajas 6/12/2013
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Aural Pleasure Review

Rage Against the Machine: 'Rage Against the Machine XX (20th Anniversary Edition)'

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In the first-ever public appearance by Rage Against the Machine (October 23, 1991, at Cal State Northridge), you see Brad Wilk in familiar no-holds-barred mode, a clumsy-fingered Tom Morello (if there can be such a thing), a nervous Tim Commerford on bass, and on the side of the stage, Zach de la Rocha not knowing where to put his hands, anxiously waiting for the band's instrumental intro to "Killing in the Name." When De la Rocha finally walks to the center of the stage, grabs the mic, and joins the others for "Take the Power Back," you begin to understand why RATM took the world by storm. This (and other) early shows can be seen in this must-have reissue of the band's seminal debut, which did the unthinkable: it took a radical leftist band that mixed rap and metal to the mainstream. The reissue comes in three formats, but the deluxe version is worth every penny: It includes the legendary demo of that first album (sold for $5 at the merch table during shows), full concerts (the 1991 Cal State one and 2010's Finsbury Park in the U.K.), and a bunch of videos. The music has aged so well you may even forgive them for suggesting Abimael Guzmán (the leader of Peru's Maoist Shining Path guerrillas) was a good guy (the terrific "Bombtrack" video). Sadly, every word Zach spits is still relevant today. So is the music.

★★★★★ (out of 5 stars)

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