With the recent release of ‘Rage Against the Machine - XX,’ the 20th anniversary edition of Rage Against the Machine's self-titled debut disc, fans had plenty of reason to celebrate in hopes that it marked only the beginning of fresh new things to come from the band. However, guitarist Tom Morello has squashed that dream for now, even going so far to say that the band may never play together again at all. Say it isn’t so, Tom!

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, the Rage guitarist gave his honest assessment on the current status of the band and what the future holds. "Whether or not we ever play music again in any capacity is unknown,” Morello said. “I'm grateful for the music we played together, and thank goodness the cameras were rolling."

Morello made it very clear that the resilience to record new music and tour is not coming from him directly. "If it were up to me, I would've made two records a year," Morello confided. "As it is, we have just three records of original material over 20 years."

He also talked about what he hoped the anniversary release might spawn, explaining, “It was my great hope that we'd celebrate the 20th anniversary with a five-continent world tour.” Without a tour in sight, Morello is still grateful about everything the box set stands for and hopes that in addition to making longtime fans happy that it will turn on some new fans as well. “The reason why we're doing this is very clear and simple: it's for our fans, which I believe are the single most dedicated, wild in concert, and patient fans maybe in the history of rock music,” said Morello.“It was past due that we really did something that honored their commitment to us over the course of 20 years.”

While this might not breed a lot of hope for a future Rage Against the Machine tour, the idea is always on the table. “Once a year, the band meets and very seriously discusses and turns down awesome offers to tour the world,” admitted Morello. “That's part of the program.”

Morello doesn’t seem to harbor any resentment regarding the frustrating situation though, he considers his Rage bandmates family, “I love them,” he said. “I consider them brothers and brothers-in-arms."

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