This  year at least, Rage  Against  the Machine  are two-party bomb-throwers. The  agit-rockers, world Health Organization are already playing a show in Minneapolis  during the Republican  National  Convention  in September,  have hardly announced some other gig during the Democratic  National  Convention  in Denver  at the end of this month.
The  "Tent  State  Music  Festival  to End  the War"  will take place August  27 at the Denver  Coliseum  and feature sets by Rage,  the Flobots,  the Coup,  State  Radio  and former MC5  guitar player Wayne  Kramer,  whose proto-punk band famously performed against the wishes of Chicago  Mayor  Richard  Daley  during the violent protests international the 1968 DNC  gathering. The  circle went home plate without their instruments, only they did have bloody battle scars from brawls with police.
Rage  also know a thing or deuce about acquiring shut down at the DNC,  as their 2000 set during the party's gathering in Los  Angeles  erupted in chaos when police rushed in and used bust gas to disperse the crowd. This  year's all-ages show testament begin at 11 a.m., and tickets ar free to those world Health Organization sign up for the lottery by presenting a valid ID  at the Tent  State  University  location in Denver  between August  24 and August  26. Winners  will be notified by electronic mail on August  26.
The  Denver  protest event is being put on in alignment with the Iraq  Veterans  Against  the War  and Tent  State  University,  a group that works to help whitney Young people "shoot back their campuses and their communities." Tent  State  plans to erect a "sea of tents" in City  Park,  Denver,  during the DNC  and create an "alternative university, instruction tactics and strategies necessary to force an end to this war." Among  the guests on tap during the protest are third-party presidential candidate Ralph  Nader  and former Democratic  Congresswoman  Cynthia  McKinney.
During  the protest, Tent  State  will also host a series of other shows as part of the first gear Tent  State  Music  Festival,  featuring sets by longtime social critic and ex-Dead  Kennedys  isaac M. Singer Jello  Biafra,  as well as the Coup,  Michelle  Shocked,  Jill  Sobule  and some "particular guests" during an case they are billing as "4 Days  of Love  & Action."
The  logo for the protest, as considerably as the slogan, are meant to evoke the iconic bill sticker for the legendary 1969 Woodstock  Festival,  which promised "3 Days  of Peace  and Music"  and featured a white bird sitting on the neck of a guitar. The  Tent  State  festival, in demarcation, features an electric guitar being held aloft by a fist.
The  organization has several days' worth of creative protests planned, including the Funky  Snake  Marches  that will wind through downtown to protest the war in Iraq,  day-by-day morning gatherings that the group says will "twist downtown into one massive reminder to the delegates and the public of what war looks like" and the erection of mock checkpoints around Denver  on August  26 to "mimic the experiences we force on people in Iraq,  Palestine  and on the U.S./Mexico  border."
Other  acts of the Apostles scheduled to perform during the Tent  State  festival include: Melissa  Ivey,  Blue  Scholars,  Son  of Nun,  God-des  and She,  8" Betsy,  David  Rovics,  Rachel  Bagby,  Common  Market,  Apex  Vibe,  P  Nuckle,  Fulcrum,  Kombat,  DJ  Russh  and the Flash  Mob.
The  latest Rage  show is parting of a growing musical roster for both conventions, which also includes a just-announced Grammy  Foundation-sponsored  gig featuring Daughtry,  Everclear  and the Flobots  during the DNC;  a Service  Employees  International  Union-sponsored  show by Rage  guitarist Tom  Morello,  Mos  Def,  Lupe  Fiasco  and Steve  Earle  during the Republican  Convention;  and various other local concerts in the Minneapolis/  St.  Paul  area during the gathering.
MTV  News  and our Street  Team  '08 citizen journalists will be on the strand at both conventions, sort through speeches, streamers and ceremony to find the information you need to choose our next president of the United States. Stay  tuned for more coverage.
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