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Founded by New York City natives Delila Paz and Edgey Pires, The Last Internationale
quickly forged a reputation for poetic, socially conscious songs and explosive live
performances. Tom Morello (Rage Against the Machine), noted, "The Last Internationale
are one of my favorites in the next wave of rebel rockers. They're raw and real and mix East
Village rock sensibilities with Battleship Potemkin firepower."
Over Thanksgiving dinner at Morello's home, talk turned to the duo's need for a drummer.
Morello suggested they talk with Brad Wilk (Rage Against the Machine, Audioslave), and
got Brad on the phone. After hearing the material and bonding with Edgey & Delila, Wilk
signed on. The Last Internationale's debut album - Brendan O'Brien (Bruce Springsteen,
Pearl Jam, Neil Young) - will be released by Epic Records in 2014.
A few words on The Last Internationale written by Bill Ayers:
Shortly after the legendary rebel singer Pete Seeger passed from this world, a friend passed
on to me We Will Reign from The Last Internationale—and life came back into balance. Sad
to say so long to Pete who’d provided so many sweet harmonies for many, many righteous
campaigns gone by, but ecstatic to meet the newest phoenix rising from the old and laying
down a powerful soundtrack for what lies ahead. Delila’s strikingly lucid voice, Edgey’s
driving chords, Brad’s perfect beats mixed with a vision that synchronizes: it’s all such a
stunning symmetry.
The Last Internationale picks up the torch carried in various places and at different times
by Bob Marley and the Wailers, Nina Simone, Public Enemy, Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan,
Rage Against the Machine, and hundreds more. That torch is deployed here to illuminate
the dark spaces of injustice as well as to light up a path toward freedom. The Last
Internationale speaks with passion and intimacy to anarchists and guerrillas, to comradesin-arms, to friends and strangers alike, tripping and running, busting out of jail—breaking
all the entanglements that ensnare us, all the cotton wool that smothers us—searching out
the rhythms of resistance, and deploying every one of the weapons within reach: truthtelling and courage, beauty and form, abiding patience and infinite perseverance,
indignation, urgency, incitement, and mostly love. These power-house rebel-rockers hold
the torch with renewed confidence and a sparkling fresh spirit.
We Will Reign overflows with emotional richness and humanity, challenges us to throw off
the lifeless, unpleasant, and unerotic in our lives, and announces a profound truth: any
revolution worth having will be powered by a deep desire for joy as well as justice. We can
feel the thud of the police stick and the searing pain of the interrogation cell, but also the
exhilaration of choosing to lead a moral life in a world gone mad, and the power of
pursuing a politics based on freedom dreams beyond dogma and opportunism. The music
hums with the universal hope for a world in balance and at peace, and it’s punctuated with
the most basic human cry: I shall create! I found myself provoked and agitated, gasping for
air, talking to myself and hollering back, laughing through tears while screaming above the
ecstasy. WWR does what good art demands: I was in orbit.
We Will Reign—part joyous awakening, part indictment of unnecessary suffering, part
astonishing love-letter, and part full-throated invitation to a revolution—is not so much a
map as a beckoning, not a completed script, but fragments of an unfinished improvisation.
They have a story to tell, a thousand stories really, echo after echo from long ago and from
just a minute past, reverberations booming toward an uncertain future and ricocheting
back at us, refrains from the rough but lovely localities of the wretched of the earth to the
hard boundaries of lost and disappearing things. Every line calls us together and invites us
to create, each gestures toward a world that could be but is not yet; every note offers
another door you might squeeze through in search of the rest of your life. Turn the knob,
slip the lip, dive headfirst into the wreckage—now there you are.
Bill Ayers
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