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2 ноя 2025

RISE AGAINST's TIM MCILRATH: 'You Can't Ask Me To Disown My Politics Any More Than You Can Ask Me To Disown My Family'
 In a new interview with the 100 Words Or Less podcast, RISE AGAINST frontman Tim McIlrath spoke about how he injects political activism into his songwriting. Regarding how he navigates the fact that not everybody who listens to RISE AGAINST's music agrees with his political views, Tim said (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): "There's that 16-year-old me that doesn't mind making people a little uncomfortable… I'm not that person today, but that kid still exists in me. And so it makes me not care too much about the friction that I create. And not in a mean or confrontational way — I just know that that's where change happens, in that friction, that you gotta be a little confrontational, you have to create a little bit of friction. And I also feel like we've been given this huge opportunity to play for a crowd that's bigger than the Fireside Bowl [venue in Chicago]. And so there's a lot of responsibility, like, 'Hey, you guys made it out of this scene, and now you're in this bigger scene. So, tell them. Tell them what we talk about. Talk about environmentalism. Talk about sweatshops and fair labor. Talk about animal rights.' You now have a bigger microphone, a bigger bullhorn. You're doing it. So how could I leave that behind? How can I just drop that all of a sudden, just to get a few more smiling faces and thumbs up from a gen pop crowd of people who listen to everything and are unfamiliar with my scene. And so we're a package deal. [Laughs] We come with that baggage, and you're gonna get it in the song and on the stage and whatever else.
"And so does it ever bother me? Do I ever like lament? I want everyone to love what we're doing," he continued. "But it doesn't bother me in the sense that, like, there's nothing I can do about it. This is who I am. It's, like, take it or leave it.
"You can't ask me to disown my politics any more than you can ask me to disown my family," Tim added. "There's not a price tag on that. I understand what you're asking, but you understand I'm unable to accommodate that request. So, sorry. And if anything, [RISE AGAINST's sociopolitical messages are] part of who we are as a band and why you know who we are as a band. They're part of our DNA and our identity. If people gravitated towards our music and our band, there's something about what we do that made that happen. So even if you wanna talk about it as, as strictly a commercial decision, it will be bad to take this out. We're leaving this in. It makes sense on no level to all of a sudden strip a band of its personality."
Earlier this year, Tim told Sophie Dobschall of the Eyes Closed blog and Messed!Up Magazine that he wants people to "walk away feeling hope" after listening to RISE AGAINST's music. "The way I look at songs, as a songwriter, is that RISE AGAINST is a band that, like maybe many other bands, we are writing a song and we might take you to a dark place, we might bring you down into this dark cave and show you problems and conflict and sadness and that kind of thing, and then maybe where we're different, or I hope we are at least, is that before that song is over, I hope that there's a trail of breadcrumbs that will lead you out of it. We're not gonna leave you in the dark. We want you to see the underbelly, we want you to see the problems of the world and society and the human condition, but, at the same time, because I think, as a songwriter, I do feel real hope and a lot of our fans give me that hope, I wanna make sure the song is laced with that hope as well. And so by the end of it, it's, like, yes, these are problems, but they're not something we haven't seen before and not something that we can't tackle and not something that we can't get through."
He continued: "So living in a moment — right now we're watching this rise of a radical right wing sort of ideology sort of consuming the planet. That's something RISE AGAINST has spoken about since our inception. We're not a band that veered into politics late in our career; we're a band that came out of the gates with politics. And so I think we've been unapologetic about our position. And I think what I'm focused on now is sort of reminding people the punk and hardcore values that exist in a band like ours have always been anti-racist, anti-sexist, anti-homophobic. Punk has been pro science, punk has been pro truth and pro facts. And there is some of that that that gets twisted in the world we live in nowadays with disinformation and lack of critical thinking, or just really misinformed critical thinking that turns into conspiracy theories. As a band now, I think our mission is to kind of remind people that there's a lot of different people out there trying to pull you into their revolution. But if that revolution, if there are elements of racism and sexism and homophobia in that revolution, that's something that punk and hardcore has always rejected. And that's a good way to find out if you are in some sort of bullshit revolution or going down the wrong path. And that's something that we'll just kind of continue to sing about."
When Dobschall noted that she "having a really hard time right now being hopeful," Tim said: "I think that's normal. I think that there's stress and anxiety in turning on the news these days, especially for somebody who cares about people and cares about the direction of the planet. And so, yeah, there are moments that I think that we are going to feel a lot of anxiety, and this is when we double down. This is when we put up a fight.
"I think I look at it as sometimes things have to get really bad for us to shake ourselves out of the sort of apathy, and I think there was a lot of apathy that allowed the White House to turn into what it has turned into," Tim explained. "I think the silver lining is that I think that we're going to expose what a radical right really looks like and what they really want, something that they've been good at kind of keeping secret, but now the secret's kind of out and we're seeing all these sort of racist and sexist underpinnings to the policies. And I think people are good and they're going to reject that, when they get a chance to reject that. And in the meantime, we get to see on full display how backwards, how anti-science and anti-fact like a lot of these ideologies are. And that's something that I hope is one of the silver linings in this."
RISE AGAINST's first new album in four years, "Ricochet", came out on August 15 via Loma Vista Recordings.
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Мужика же это пиздец как беспокоит.
Справедливости ради - пару песен нравится.
Тот же Savior- Ебещая песня ? Ебещая. Но где там права креветок и угнетение бобров. Я хз.
Фуфло короче толкает , такое же как и Русалка из Arch Enemy которая каждую неделю обнуляется в " своей борьбе" , после того как нечаянно закусит сушами с минтаем.