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    • Corey Irwin
    • David Bowie, “Black Tie, White Noise” Fateful timing put David Bowie and his newlywed wife, Iman, in Los Angeles on the day of the riots. The couple were searching for a new home when the mayhem commenced and ended up watching everything unfold through their hotel room television.
    • Rage Against the Machine, “Killing In the Name” One of the most famous songs in Rage Against the Machine’s catalog was directly inspired by the events of the L.A.
    • Aerosmith, “Livin’ on the Edge” What kind of “Instant Karma”-style song would John Lennon have written following the riots? That’s the question that went through the mind of Mark Hudson.
    • Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, “Peace in L.A.” After touring in Europe, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers returned home to Los Angeles just before the riots.
  2. Which single was inspired by the 1992 Los Angeles Riots? "Killing in the Name" What artist is not from Los Angeles? Radiohead. Rage Against the Machine's sound is ...

    • “The Day The N*ggaz Took Over” – Dr. Dre
    • “April 29, 1992
    • “Free Your Mind” – en Vogue
    • “Rodney King” – Thurz
    • “Black Tie, White Noise” – David Bowie
    • “Killing in The Name” – Rage Against The Machine
    • “Hellrazer” – 2Pac
    • “Livin’ on The Edge” – Aerosmith
    • “We Had to Tear This Mothaf*Cka Up” – Ice Cube
    • “Cop Killer” – Body Count

    Dr. Dre was no stranger to racial controversy when he released his solo debut The Chronic in December 1992. As part of the group N.W.A, Dre provided instrumentals for some of the most cutting, abrasive lyrics that had ever been put to record. It then comes as no surprise that he would make reference to the Los Angeles Riots on the album cut “The Da...

    Yes, this Sublime song is titled “April 29, 1992 (Miami).” And yes, lead singer Bradley Nowell does sing it as “April 26, 1992” on the chorus– a glaring mistake that was ultimately overlooked because the group felt that it was the best take. Whatever confusion pertains to the title, however, is done away with in the song’s content, as “April 29, 19...

    Nearly a year after the Los Angeles Riots had ceased, R&B quartet En Vogue decided to approach issues of inequality and prejudice from an positive outlook. Opening with a vocal snippet of the sketch series In Living Color(“Prejudice, want a song about it? Here you go”), En Vogue proceed to drop their smooth, signature sound for a tough guitar riff ...

    By far the most recent inclusion on the list, this 2011 song is rapped entirely from the perspective of Rodney King, on the day leading up to his attack. California emcee Thurzpaints a stunningly detailed portrait of the man, capturing stream-of-consciousness topics like basketball scores and weed smoke before his infamous showdown with the police:...

    The Los Angeles Riots just so happened to take place the same day David Bowie and his wife Iman were in the city looking for homes to buy. Shocked by the brutality of what he saw, Bowie took the experience and channeled into “Black Tie, White Noise” the title track from his 1993 album. “It’s very important the promote the coming together of dispara...

    Rage Against the Machine was born out of the unrest and aggression that was Los Angeles in the early 1990s. Led by vocalist Zack de la Rocha, Rage’s mission as a band was simple: to rock as hard as humanly possible. And nowhere was this more evident than on their self-titled 1992 debut, which featured classic songs like “Bombtrack,” “Bullet In the ...

    2Pac‘s connection to the L.A. Riots is not as direct as it may initially seem. In 1992, the legendary emcee had only one studio album to his name, and was still mainly known as a protege of the playful group Digital Underground. It wasn’t until the release of his next album, Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z.(1993), that ‘Pac began to shape the politically...

    “Livin’ On the Edge” (1993) finds Aerosmith singing from a place of profound social commentary: “There’s something wrong with the world today / I don’t know what it is / Something’s wrong with our eyes / We’re seeing things in a different way / And God knows it ain’t his / It sure ain’t no surprise.” According to the band’s autobiography, Walk This...

    No artist is more associated with the Los Angeles Riots than Ice Cube. His 1991 masterpiece Death Certificate is seen by many as a precursor to the riots, with references to police brutality, drug dealing, and racism towards Korean Americans in California. This political mindset continued into The Predator, which was released in November of 1992 an...

    “Cop Killer” caused a firestorm of controversy in 1992. Though it was recorded prior to the L.A. Riots, the song quickly became a rallying cry against police brutality– to the point where the Dallas Police Association and the Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas launched a campaign against Sony Records to get the song withdrawn. Dennis R. ...

  3. May 11, 2022 · Initially, the lyrics—written by singer Zach de la Rocha, along with Morello, bassist Timothy Robert Commerford, and drummer Brad Wilk— were inspired by the Rodney King beating by Los Angeles...

  4. " Killing in the Name " is a song by the American band Rage Against the Machine, and appears on their 1992 self-titled debut album. It features heavy drop-D guitar riffs and lyrics protesting police brutality inspired by the beating of Rodney King and the 1992 Los Angeles riots .

    • The Watts Prophets, “Dem Niggers Ain’t Playing” (1971) The work of the Watts Prophets points to an earlier but no less incendiary time in Los Angeles’ tortured racial history.
    • Toddy Tee, “Batterram” (1985) In the early 1980s, the Los Angeles police department employed the B-100 armored vehicle, popularly known as the “batterram,” to bash their way into suspected drug houses.
    • Guns N’ Roses, “One in a Million” (1988) “Police and niggers – that’s right! – get out of my way!/ Don’t need to buy your gold chains today,” sings Axl Rose on “One in a Million,” his bigoted account of moving to Los Angeles in the early 1980s.
    • N.W.A, “Fuck The Police” (1988) No list of songs that predicted the L.A. riots would be complete without N.W.A’s seminal call for resistance. Structured as a mock trial with Dr. Dre as judge and an unnamed cop as defendant, Ice Cube, MC Ren and Eazy-E air their grievances: police that target minorities, assume that every young black male is a “selling narcotics,” and black police who brutalize with as much maliciousness as their white counterparts.
  5. Apr 27, 2017 · Following the 1992 acquittal of four LAPD officers in the beating of Rodney King, Los Angeles residents reacted by looting businesses, setting fire to buildings, and rioting for six days....

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