A year ago today 😢
Wayne Kramer, the guitarist best known for his work in the influential Detroit hard rock band MC5, died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 75.
Photo by Leni Sinclair
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A year ago today 😢
Wayne Kramer, the guitarist best known for his work in the influential Detroit hard rock band MC5, died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 75.
Photo by Leni Sinclair
“Let me be who I am / and let me kick out the jams.” The MC5 may have gotten all the attention for the obscenity that kicked off their debut single, recorded live in front of a heaving mass of 3,000 Detroit rock-and-rollers all losing their minds, but the truth is, it’s a truly ferocious blast of sonic reckless abandon.
Day #2937 Das Damen – Triskaidekaphobe #sstrecords #1988 #waynekramer #mc5 #minorthread #tshirtwars #dasdamen #Triskaidekaphobe
In memory of Wayne Kramer (real name Kambes), American guitarist, singer, songwriter, lead guitarist and co-founder of the Detroit rock band MC5, born in 1948 in Detroit, Michigan.
📸 Leni Sinclair
Sometimes you just get lucky. Here’s the classic 1969 debut by Detroit’s own MC5, the incendiary Kick Out The Jams. Recorded live, it’s a slamming album often heralded as the progenitor of punk, especially due to the killer title track, captured here like lightning in a bottle, turning a merely suggestive track about getting it on backstage before a concert into a volatile explosion of adrenaline. So how did I get lucky? No, not like the singer; I came across this album for a buck at a garage sale a few years ago, and while I already owned a scratchy copy, I picked it up, hoping that this was the moderately rare early version with uncensored audio, as the song famously starts with singer Rob Tyner exhorting to the audience “Kick Out The Jams, motherf…s!” As you might guess, that got removed from the records almost as soon as they hit store shelves. I figured I could gamble a buck on finding that. As it turned out, not only was the music uncensored on this copy, but so was the record jacket, which made it even more rare. Inside the gatefold is an essay by the band’s manager/shaman, controversial White Panther leader John Sinclair. The essay ALSO got removed from the album, too, even before the obscene song introduction, making fully uncensored copies of the album impossible to find. Since I found this copy, I’ve only ever spotted another one once, at Academy Records in NYC on the wall, going for $200. So yes, I lucked out. The MC5 are once again nominated for the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame this year and surely won’t get in, but you gotta admit—few things are more rock n roll than having your first album censored twice before the world even knows who you are.
Happy Independence Day to my American Friends! 24% of my Instagram followers are from the USA 🇺🇸 making it my #1 country by number of followers. . So where’s my own country on the list? Not even in the top 5! 🤨 It’s the same old story: so many Canadians have to seek fame and fortune south of the border before they are recognized in their own country. Neil Young, Drake, Nickelback...the list is endless. 😂 Anyhoo: Next up we’ll be celebrating the independence day of the country where I have the second most followers (hint: it’s Sete de Setembro 🇧🇷)! 😀 #WayneKramer #Strat spotted at Ludlow Guitars, #NYC back in 2012. . . #happy4thofjuly #mc5 #fender #stratocaster #straturday #guitar #guitars #guitarra #chitarra #guitarre #electricguitar #fenderguitars #customshop #fendercustomshop #reissue #relic #closetclassic #tone #guitargear #guitarsdaily #guitarsofinstagram #geartalk #guitargear #vintagegear #guitarsdaily #fendersofinstagram #guitarphotography (at Ludlow Guitars) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bzfh1d9BAg0/?igshid=viudeuyy90ft
Right now...right now it’s time to...KICK OUT THE JAMS MOTHAHF*CKAS!!!! #WayneKramer #Stratocaster spotted at the old #LudlowStreetGuitars in NYC, May 2012. #fender #strat #straturday #mc5 #kickoutthejams #newyorkcity #flashback #guitar #guitars #guitarra #chitarra #guitarre #electricguitar #fenderguitars #customshop #fendercustomshop #tone #guitargear #guitarsdaily #guitarsofinstagram #geartalk #guitargear #vintagegear #guitarsdaily #fendersofinstagram #guitarphotography (at Ludlow Street) https://www.instagram.com/p/BugVa39BjVy/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1rlb2wuvofli8
Por: ROGELIO GARZA
Rama lama fa fa fa: el brother Wayne Kramer salió disparado de este mundo como su “Rocket Reducer No. 62”. La muerte alcanzó al guitarrista, compositor, cantante y productor que armó al meteórico MC5, grupo de carrera corta e influencia muy larga, con sólo tres discos revolucionarios. Músico, activista, adicto, presidiario, carpintero, héroe de la contracultura y, sobre todo, un gran ser humano, el cáncer de páncreas lo mató a los 75 años.
Fans de James Brown, Little Richard y Chuck Berry, Los Motor City 5 querían tocar el rock más salvaje de Detroit con un ataque de dos guitarristas fuera de serie: Kramer y Fred “Sonic” Smith, el carismático cantante Rob Tyner, y una sección rítmica maciza que mantenía el curso entre los excesos de distorsión y feedback. Entonces, en 1967, apareció John Sinclair con ideología, drogas y un saxofón, y los introdujo al free jazz. Con sus “hermanitos”, los Chiflados de Iggy Pop, empollaron el huevo protopunk que una década más tarde estallaría como granada nazi en la cara del mainstream. Un gran crack musical.
Sinclair se volvió mánager y gurú. Periodista, activista radical de izquierda y fundador del partido Panteras Blancas, hizo de Los MC5 el brazo musical de su organización antisistema, prodrogas y sexo libre, afiliando a los obreros y estudiantes que los seguían al grito de Kick out the jams, motherfuckers! Eran canciones cargadas de ideas políticas, por tanto, la música también tenía que ser revolucionaria: distorsión y letras combativas. Para Kramer el concierto era la experiencia central de la música, eran conocidos por intensos y extremos, por eso su primer disco fue en vivo, en el Grande Ballroom: Kick Out the Jams, de 1968. En el mismo tono siguieron Back in the USA y High Time, ejemplares del rock feroz y transgresor que se exhibió en la Convención Nacional Democrática de Chicago ese año. Por todo eso prohibieron sus discos, los vetaron en el radio, les cerraron las puertas y la policía los acosó por puro deporte. Hasta que Sinclair fue sentenciado a nueve años de cárcel por dos pinches toques. Los MC5 se desbandaron en 1972, era imposible seguir.
Pero Kramer también cayó por vender droga a dos agentes encubiertos en 1975 y fue sentenciado a cuatro años. Dentro, formó la banda Street Sounds con el trompetista Red Rodney, del grupo de Charlie Parker.
De esa experiencia surgió la fundación Jail Guitar Doors, para donar instrumentos y dar clases de música en las prisiones. Se dedicó a tocar y a producir más de cincuenta discos propios y ajenos, y a la carpintería de casas, mientras apoyaba a Bernie Sanders, el candidato de los punks. Coherente hasta el final, no como…
LA CANCIÓN #6