The Nightwatchman is the alter ego of
Tom Morello, guitarist with
Rage Against the Machine and
Audioslave. While
Morello is best known for his bracing mix of hard rock fury with hip-hop accents, as
the Nightwatchman he performs as a solo acoustic singer and songwriter, playing self-penned songs that reflect his leftist political beliefs. Born in New York City in 1964 and raised in Libertyville, Illinois by his mother (a longtime political activist),
Morello taught himself to play guitar while he was a student at Harvard University, where he received a degree in political science. After graduating,
Morello moved to Los Angeles and joined a hard rock band called
Lock Up, which scored a deal with Geffen Records; however,
Lock Up's sole album, released in 1989, sank without a trace and they soon broke up.
Morello had much better luck with his next project --
Rage Against the Machine, which fused hip-hop rhythms and fractured heavy metal guitar sounds alongside
Zack de la Rocha's agitprop lyrics.
RATM released their first album in 1992, and became one of the most influential bands of the 1990s, blazing the trail for the rap-metal movement and confirming that there was still room for firebrand politics in mainstream rock & roll.
Rage Against the Machine split up suddenly in 2000 following the release of their album
Renegades, and
Morello and his bandmates
Tim Commerford and
Brad Wilk soldiered on as
Audioslave with former
Soundgarden vocalist
Chris Cornell.
In 2003, inspired by
Bob Dylan's early work and
Bruce Springsteen's
Nebraska and outraged by the administration of
George W. Bush,
Morello began writing topical songs and singing them at informal shows in California coffeehouses. Calling himself
the Nightwatchman,
Morello admits to having severe stage fright during his first appearances as a vocalist, but before long he gained confidence and in 2004
the Nightwatchman took part in the Tell Us the Truth tour, a series of concerts (also featuring
Billy Bragg,
Steve Earle, and
Boots Riley of
the Coup) staged to raise awareness during the 2004 presidential campaign; an album was released from the tour's recordings, featuring two songs from
Morello.
A few months later,
the Nightwatchman emerged again on Axis of Justice: Concert Series, Vol. 1, another live album drawn from a series of benefit concerts for Axis of Justice, a political activist group founded by
Morello and
Serj Tankian of
System of a Down.
Morello continued performing as
the Nightwatchman when not busy with
Audioslave, and in 2006 he recorded
the Nightwatchman's first album,
One Man Revolution, produced by
Brendan O'Brien and released in April 2007.
In 2011,
Morello -- as
the Nightwatchman -- performed during the demonstrations in Wisconsin supporting the rights of state workers to collectively bargain, in response to a historic union-busting bill spearheaded by governor Scott Walker. He was inspired by the demonstrations there, and by the protests in Cairo, Egypt demanding democracy that eventually toppled the regime of Hosni Mubarek, to record an eight-song benefit EP of pro-union anthems entitled Union Town. It was released early in the summer of 2011 -- with all profits going to the America Votes Labor Unity Fund. The set included three
Morello originals and five standards, including the full-length version of
Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land" with the -- usually -- censored verse intact.
Morello, once again as
the Nightwatchman, followed the disc with the full-length World Wide Rebel Songs, released in August 2011 on
New West.
Morello, playing electric and acoustic guitar, was backed by his road band the Freedom Fighter Orchestra.
Ben Harper sat in on the track "Save the Hammer for the Man." ~ Mark Deming